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Simmons D R - - 1998
The binocular summation of chromatic contrast was investigated under a variety of stimulus conditions. Binocular and monocular contrast detection thresholds were measured using 0.5 cpd Gabor patches. It was found that, using stimuli which contained combinations of chromatic and luminance contrast, binocular detection could take place independently in luminance-contrast- and ...
Goodyear B G - - 1998
In this study, we examined the effect of stimulus luminance contrast on blood-oxygenation-level-dependent (BOLD) functional magnetic resonance imaging within human visual cortex (V1 and extrastriate). Between experiments, the calibrated luminance of a single red LED covering 2 degrees of the subject's visual field was changed relative to a constant background ...
Brannan J R - - 1998
BACKGROUND: Considerable evidence exists that some reading-disabled children have disordered visual processing, specifically in the fast processing magnocellular (M) pathway. METHODS: The extent that varying luminance and temporal frequency affect amplitude and latency of visual evoked potentials (VEPs) in normally achieving and reading-disabled children grades 4 to 6 was measured. ...
Pearson P - - 1998
OBJECTIVE: In order to gain a more complete picture of the influence of alcohol on visual performance, we measured contrast sensitivity for a range of spatial and temporal frequencies in individuals with moderate blood alcohol concentrations (BACs). METHOD: Subjects were tested at blood alcohol concentrations of 0.06% in both the ...
Edwards M - - 1998
Vergence has transient components that are stimulated by brief presentations of stimuli at large disparities (up to several degrees). The question that we have addressed is what stimulus features are encoded by this system. A competition paradigm [Jones & Kerr, (1972)]. Vision Research, 12, 1425-1430) was used in which three ...
Wehrhahn C - - 1998
We measured detection of a thin vertical line (target) in the presence of a slightly thicker collinear, adjacent line (inducer). Sign and strength of contrast of the inducer were varied. Test lines could be either bright or dark. Detection thresholds were obtained through a temporal two-alternative forced-choice (2AFC) procedure with ...
Lopes de Faria J M - - 1998
AIM/BACKGROUND: The contrast sensitivity function (CSF) measurement provides information that is not accessible by standard visual acuity determinations. The contrast sweep pattern reversal visual evoked responses (CSVER) technique was used to objectively measure the CSF in clinical practice. METHODS: The contrast thresholds were measured at five spatial frequencies in 10 ...
Odom J V - - 1999
We determined the relative importance of electrode derivation, stimulus type, spatial frequency and contrast in determining the relative size of the late negative and early positive responses of motion elicited VEPs. Seven subjects aged 22-48 years with normal vision were tested binocularly. Motion onset and motion reversal were employed as ...
Tolhurst D J - - 1997
The psychophysical task of discriminating changes in the slopes of the amplitude spectra of complex images has been used in the past to test whether the human visual system might be optimised for coding the spatial structure in natural images (e.g. Knill et al., 1990; Tadmor & Tolhurst, 1994). We ...
Foley J M - - 1997
Pattern contrast thresholds for vertical Gabor patterns were measured on pattern pedestals that were vertical or horizontal. Contrast of the pedestal was varied to measure the function relating target contrast threshold to pedestal contrast (TvC function). TvC functions were measured without an adaptor and after adaptation to vertical, horizontal and ...
Hainline L - - 1997
This study presents spatial contrast sensitivity functions from 66 infants ranging in age from 12 to 146 days. Functions were derived using a behavioral method based on eye movements; in this method, the subject viewed drifting sinusoidal gratings while an experimenter, who did not know the direction of stimulus drift, ...
Poot L - - 1997
As is well known, dark adaptation in the human visual system is much slower than is recovery from darkness. We show that at high photopic luminances the situation is exactly opposite. First, we study detection thresholds for a small light flash, at various delays from decrement and increment steps in ...
Pokorny J - - 1997
Physiological data have revealed characteristic contrast gain and temporal integration signatures of the magnocellular (MC) and the parvocellular (PC) pathways. The goal in this study was to find psychophysical correlates of these signatures. Psychophysical forced-choice, luminance pedestal discrimination data were collected with a stimulus-surround display. A 2.05 degrees four-square stimulus ...
Solomon J A - - 1997
The effects of spatial cuing were measured for discrimination between an increment and a decrement on a target's pedestal contrast. Discrimination thresholds measured in the absence of a spatial cue were always higher than corresponding thresholds measured in the presence of a spatial cue, except when pedestal contrast was near ...
Webster M A - - 1997
Natural images have a characteristic spatial structure, with amplitude spectra that decrease with frequency roughly as 1/f. We have examined how contrast (pattern-selective) adaptation to this structure influences the spatial sensitivity of the visual system. Contrast thresholds and suprathreshold contrast and frequency matches were measured after adaptation to random samples ...
Barlow H B - - 1997
Knowledge is often thought to be something brought from outside to act upon the visual messages received from the eye in a 'top-down' fashion, but this is a misleadingly narrow view. First, the visual system is a multilevel heterarchy with connections acting in all directions so it has no 'top'; ...
Eagle R A - - 1997
Two-frame random-dot kinematograms (RDKs) of different dot density, area and contrast were used to study the spatial properties of the human visual motion system. It was found that the maximum spatial displacement at which observers could reliably discriminate the direction of motion (dmax) increased gradually by a factor of up ...
Bilodeau L - - 1997
Isoluminance and chromatic motion perception for red/green gratings were measured throughout an 80 deg visual field. Generally, the red/green isoluminance values changed with increasing eccentricity, i.e., observers increased the red luminance contrast for a fixed green luminance contrast. Enlarging the target size (to compensate for the cone density changes with ...
Gray R - - 1997
Using as the stimulus a texture pattern of short lines, we compared positional acuity thresholds for an orientation-texture-defined (OTD) boundary and a luminance-defined (LD) boundary. Texture lines had different orientations but the same luminance on either side of the OTD boundary, and different luminances but the same orientation on either ...
Porciatti V - - 1997
Increasing anatomical evidence indicates that large retinal ganglion cells (M-cells) are preferentially damaged in primary open angle glaucoma (OAG), while the smaller ganglion cells (P-cells) are relatively spared. In 13 patients with defined OAG and modest visual field defects, we evaluated the responses to stimuli that are expected to involve ...
Bach M - - 1997
We compared the contrast dependency (from 0.4 to 98%) of the visual evoked potential (VEP) to motion onset and to pattern reversal at an occipital and lateral recording site using sinewave grating stimuli of 0.9 c/deg, drifting at 4.9 deg/sec. Two differing VEP components were identified: a positive component, peaking ...
Bruno N - - 1997
Observers compared two center/surround configurations haploscopically. One configuration consisted of a standard surface surrounded by two, three, or four surfaces, each with a different luminance. The other configuration consisted of a comparison surface surrounded by a single annulus that varied in luminance. Center surfaces always had the same luminance but ...
Budde W M - - 1997
BACKGROUND: Disturbances of blue color vision and of temporal contrast sensitivity can indicate early damage in glaucoma. For the present study a quick and easy test was devised which examines both functions at one time by testing the temporal contrast sensitivity of a blue flickering light on an intense yellow ...
Webster M A - - 1997
We have used the minimum-motion stimulus of Cavanagh, MacLeod & Anstis [(1987) Journal of the Optical Society of America A, 4, 1428-1438] to examine how signals along different directions in color space interact in motion perception. Stimuli were pairs of counterphasing gratings combined 90 deg out of phase in both ...
Spinelli D - - 1997
Deficits of the transient visual system have been reported in unselected groups of dyslexics. The aim of this study was to examine whether this finding holds when subjects with a specific type of developmental reading disorder (surface dyslexia) are considered. Ten Italian children were examined. They all presented the characteristic ...
Metha A B - - 1997
We simultaneously measured detection and identification performance by using isoluminant red-green (RG) and achromatic flickering stimuli and fitted these data with a modified line-element model that does not make high-threshold assumptions. The modeling shows that detection and identification data are adequately described by postulating only two underlying temporal filters each ...
De Bonet J S - - 1997
We examined the spatial integration of simultaneously induced achromatic contrast and compared it to the spatial integration of simultaneously induced brightness. This study extends the work of Zaidi et al. [(1992). Vision Research, 32, pp. 1695-1707], who showed that the total magnitude of induced brightness can be described as the ...
Chung S T - - 1997
In persons with congenital nystagmus (CN), the ability to integrate visual information over time can be limited by two factors--the duration of foveation periods and the temporal integration period of the visual system. The purpose of this study was to assess the relative importance of these two factors for visual ...
Gutowski N J - - 1997
Foveal pathway visual function was assessed in 11 patients having tumours extending into the suprasellar region but without evidence of visual impairment as assessed by visual acuity and Bjerrum screen campimetry. Psychophysical and routine visual evoked potential (VEP) measurements were obtained from the eye ipsilateral to the maximal suprasellar extension. ...
Leonards U - - 1997
Temporal interactions between spatially separated visual stimuli were investigated in human observers. Subjects had to judge whether briefly presented targets consisted of a single or a double flash. Simultaneous presentation of unattended single or double flash distractors impaired performance if target and distractor followed different time courses, confirming previous findings. ...
Polat U - - 1997
Neural interactions between widely separated stimuli were explored with psychophysical and visual evoked potential (VEP) measures in normal and amblyopic observers. Contrast detection thresholds were measured psychophysically for small foveally viewed Gabor patches presented in isolation and in the presence of similar, but laterally displaced flanks. The amplitude and phase ...
Cormack L K - - 1997
Increasing the contrast of just one eye's image degrades stereothresholds; this phenomenon is referred to as the stereo contrast paradox. In experiment one, this paradox was found to be absent in dynamic random-element stereograms; thresholds were simply limited by the lower of the two eyes' contrasts. In experiment two, in ...
Valberg A - - 1997
We have measured transient visual evoked potentials (VEPs) to low-contrast luminance stimuli favoring responses of magnocellular pathway cells and to low-contrast red-green stimuli favoring parvocellular cells. Stimuli were square-wave alternating, 3-deg homogeneous disks. Low-contrast stimuli modulated in luminance elicited relatively simple responses. For some observers, a negativity was present that ...
Johansson B - - 1997
Luminance contrast sinusoidal gratings (spatial frequencies 1, 2 and 4 cycles/degree) were compared with the corresponding color contrasting patterns (along the protan, deutan and tritan axes) to see whether they demonstrated normal binocular function in humans, and distinguished between normals and persons with defective binocularity. Contrast sensitivity and transient pattern ...
Fredericksen R E - - 1997
We propose a two-parameter model for the perceived size (spatial extent) of a Gaussian-windowed, drifting sinusoidal luminance pattern (a Gabor patch) based on the simple assumption that perceived size is determined by detection threshold for the sinusoidal carrier. Psychophysical measures of perceived size vary with peak contrast, Gaussian standard deviation, ...
Sano N - - 1997
Little is known about the central visual function of patients with normal tension glaucoma (NTG). We estimated the contrast sensitivity of patients with NTG and normal subjects with the use of pattern visually evoked cortical potentials (PVECPs). PVECPs were recorded using checkerboard pattern reversal system display on television monitor of ...
Bodis-Wollner I - - 1997
Visual sensitivity was evaluated in the central 16 degrees of the visual field in normal subjects, in patients with glaucomatous optic neuropathy, in glaucoma suspects, and in eyes of patients with multiple sclerosis without evidence of active optic neuritis. A novel method was used to assess sensitivity called contrast perimetry ...
Bowen R W - - 1997
Pattern contrast discrimination is typically studied with simultaneous onset of the base contrast (C) and added contrast (delta C) patterns. I measured contrast discrimination functions at pattern offset. A brief (30 msec) localized, spatially narrow-band D6 test stimulus was delta C. The onset of delta C was simultaneous with the ...
Spehar B - - 1997
Novel phenomena of perceived contrast and brightness in spatial configurations are presented, which are of the type used by White but consist exclusively of contrast variations or of combined contrast and luminance variations. As with White's effect, perceived contrast and brightness in these displays do not correspond to predictions based ...
Haegerstrom-Portnoy G - - 1997
PURPOSE: To design and evaluate a new vision test that combines low contrast and reduced illumination to stress the visual system and be sensitive to subtle alterations in function. METHODS: A simple new clinical test, the Smith-Kettlewell Institute Low Luminance (SKILL) Card, is designed to measure spatial vision under conditions ...
Papathomas T V - - 1996
In studying the response of mechanisms to contrast-defined texture stimuli, it is critical that the average effective luminance of these textures be equal to that of the background, to minimize net luminance-based signals. We present an efficient and accurate technique for constructing such equiluminant textures to isolate contrast-sensitive mechanisms for ...
Kulikowski J J - - 1996
A paper by Rabin et al. (1994) Vision Research, 34, 2657-2671, claimed that spatially extensive grating stimuli could be used to generate chromatic-specific visual evoked potentials from subjects assumed to have standard spectral sensitivity and tritanopic confusion lines. Here we demonstrate that such spatially extensive stimuli may generate responses which ...
Peli E - - 1996
The interaction of the effects of luminance and spatial frequency on perception of suprathreshold contrast was studied with use of a contrast-matching paradigm. Four subjects matched the appearance of Gabor patches at different luminances and spatial frequencies. The contrast of a 1-octave Gabor test patch at one of five frequencies ...
Morrone M C - - 1996
We have studied the development of the temporal characteristics of the pattern visual evoked potentials (P-VEPs) in response to contrast reversal of patterns of low spatial frequency (0.1 c/deg) of either pure luminance contrast (yellow-black plaid patterns) or pure colour contrast (equiluminant red-green plaid patterns) in 15 infants between 6 ...
Dobkins K R - - 1996
In order to assess the relative contributions of chromatic vs luminance information to motion processing in infants, we employed a motion:detection (M:D) paradigm. Stimuli consisted of 27 deg by 40 deg, 0.25 c/deg sinusoidal gratings moving at 22 deg/sec (5.6 Hz), and were either chromatically defined or luminance-defined. Contrast thresholds ...
Paradiso M A - - 1996
We report that when the luminance of a homogeneous spot of light is gradually increased or decreased, there are conditions in which the brightness of the spot is spatially nonuniform. When the spot luminance is increased, brightness changes in the spot's center lag behind changes at the edge and brightness ...
Levi D M - - 1996
BACKGROUND: When objects are stationary, human pattern vision is exquisitely acute. A number of studies show, however, that Vernier acuity for lines is greatly impaired when the target velocity exceeds about 5 deg sec-1. The degradation of line Vernier acuity under image motion appears to be a consequence of a ...
Edwards M - - 1996
A number of experiments were conducted to investigate how global-motion performance varies with luminance contrast. When all the dots in the stimulus were the same contrast, performance improved with increasing contrast up to about the 15% level (Experiment 1). Increasing the contrast beyond this level had no additional effect on ...
Rouhiainen P - - 1996
The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the relationship of various types of early lens opacities with contrast sensitivity at different spatial frequencies. The Lens Opacities Classification System II and Lensmeter 701 were used in the grading of the lens status. The contrast sensitivity was tested with the ...
Allen D - - 1996
Central and peripheral visual functions were measured simultaneously in 39 infants from 10 to 39 weeks old using a dual-frequency VEP technique. Central acuity and contrast sensitivity over a 4 deg circular field were measured at 6 or 8 Hz. Peripheral acuity and contrast sensitivity were measured simultaneously at the ...
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