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Levi D M - - 2000
The present paper asks whether Vernier offset discrimination is limited by the observer's sensitivity to local contrast change in both central and peripheral vision. To answer this question we compared Vernier discrimination and contrast discrimination thresholds (specified in the same units) for a pair of narrow ribbons of cosine gratings. ...
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Párraga C A - - 2000
It has been suggested (Tadmor and Tolhurst, 1994 Vision Research 34 541-554) that the psychophysical task of discriminating changes in the slope of the amplitude spectrum of a complex image may be similar to detecting differences in the degree of blur. It has also been suggested that human observers may ...
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Olzak L A - - 1999
Spatial interactions among orientation-tuned gain control processes are presumed to mediate center-surround contrast-contrast phenomena. In this paper, we assess contributions of gain control processes that pool over orientation. We measured the apparent contrast of a luminance-modulated center disk embedded in various modulated surrounds. In all conditions, observers compared the apparent ...
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Schulte-Körne G - - 1999
There is controversial evidence that deficits in the processing of low contrast and low spatial frequency stimuli are of importance in the pathogenesis of dyslexia. Fifteen adult dyslexics and 19 controls were examined using visual evoked potentials (VEP) at varying spatial frequencies (2 and 11.33 cpd) and contrasts (0.2, 0.4, ...
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Schefrin B E - - 1999
Scotopic contrast sensitivity functions (CSFs) were measured for 50 observers between the ages of 20 and 88 years. Using a maximum-likelihood, 2-alternative, temporal forced-choice threshold-estimation algorithm, scotopic CSFs were measured at 7 spatial frequencies ranging from 0.2 to 3.0 cpd, with mean retinal illuminance equated for observers at -0.85 log ...
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Johnston A - - 1999
Velocity matching using the method of Constant Stimuli shows that perceived velocity varies with contrast [Thompson, P. (1982). Perceived rate of movement depends upon contrast. Vision Research, 22, 377-380]. Random contrast jitter would therefore be expected to increase the slopes of psychometric functions, and thus the velocity discrimination threshold. However, ...
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Arakawa K - - 1999
OBJECTIVE: Little is known about the physiological properties of the major components of steady-state visual evoked potentials (VEPs). Based on the hypothesis that isoluminant color and high contrast pattern differentially activate the parvo- and magnocellular pathways, we studied difference in spatial frequency function between chromatic and achromatic VEPs to sinusoidal ...
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Georgeson M A - - 1999
The Adelson-Bergen energy model (Adelson, E. H., & Bergen, J. R. (1985). Spatiotemporal energy models for the perception of motion. Journal of the Optical Society of America A, 2, 284-299) is a standard framework for understanding first-order motion processing. The opponent energy for a given input is calculated by subtracting ...
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Kuyk T - - 1999
The objectives of this study were to determine the effects of reducing light level on mobility performance in persons with age-related macular degeneration (ARMD) and how performance relates to measures of visual sensory and perceptual function. ARMD results in the loss of central, high-acuity vision and is the leading cause ...
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Tiippana K - - 1999
The aim of this study was to investigate the spatial-frequency bandwidth of perceived suprathreshold contrast. It has been shown that for grating stimuli contrast detection thresholds depend on spatial frequency, grating area and the number of orientation components. However, suprathreshold contrast perception exhibits contrast constancy, i.e. suprathreshold contrast matches are ...
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Halpern S D - - 1999
The responses of 20 young adult emmetropes with normal color vision were measured on a battery of visual performance tasks. Using previously documented tests of known reliability, we evaluated orientation discrimination, contrast sensitivity, wavelength sensitivity, vernier acuity, direction-of-motion detection, velocity discrimination, and complex form identification. Performance varied markedly between individuals, ...
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Cox M J - - 1999
We investigated how the luminance of an immediate surround to a visual target affects the measurement of contrast sensitivity. We examined four young, healthy, subjects under typical lighting conditions for each test but varied the surround luminance systematically by controlling a backlit surround. The effect of varying the surround on ...
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Thiele A - - 1999
The chromatic properties of an image yield strong cues for object boundaries and thus hold the potential to facilitate the detection of object motion. The extent to which cortical motion detectors exploit chromatic information, however, remains a matter of debate. To address this further, we quantified the strength of chromatic ...
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Bonneh Y - - 1999
Contrast integration across space was studied in respect to stimulus extent and the spatial layout, using high-contrast stimuli. Contrast discrimination thresholds were measured (2AFC) by either increasing the size of a peripheral (2.4 degrees) Gabor signal (GS: lambda = 0.08 degree) or by increasing the number of GS elements in ...
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Manahilov V - - 1999
A model for contrast detection of spatiotemporal stimuli is proposed which consists of a spatiotemporal linear filter, an energy device and a threshold device. Assuming the existence of independent intrinsic noise, the probability of stimulus detection was approximated by a Weibull function of the response energy. With this assumption, the ...
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Porciatti V - - 1999
We have measured reaction time (RT) to motion onset in two groups of subjects (average ages: 70 and 29 years), for horizontal gratings of 1 c deg-1, modulated in either luminance or colour (equiluminant red-green), for various contrasts and speeds. For both old and young subjects, RTs depended on both ...
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Simmers A J - - 1999
We investigate the influence of stimulus contrast upon contour interaction in normal and amblyopic subjects. Using a computer generated acuity task, flanked and unflanked acuities were measured psychometrically at both high contrast (80%) and low contrast (6%), in a group of 19 normal and 11 amblyopic subjects. The crowding ratio ...
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Switkes E - - 1999
Using a spatial, forced-choice, matching protocol, we have measured observers' ability to equate the contrasts of sinusoidal gratings which vary along differing directions in a 3-dimensional color space. In a given experiment, the observer obtained a perceptual match between the contrasts of two gratings whose chromaticities or luminances varied along ...
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Westheimer G - - 1999
To examine the effect of reducing luminance contrast in human foveal vision, discrimination thresholds were measured in four tasks and also a numerical measure of two visual illusions were obtained by a nulling technique. The patterns used for all tasks were made very similar to facilitate comparison between them--all featured ...
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Schirillo J A - - 1999
It has been hypothesized that brightness judgments require an estimate of the illuminant. Making this estimate is difficult since luminance edges can be the result of changes in either illumination or reflectance. Articulation is the addition of equally spaced incremental and decremental patches within a surround while preserving the surround's ...
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Derrington A M - - 1999
When a plaid pattern (the sum of two high spatial frequency gratings oriented +/- 84 degrees from vertical) jumps horizontally by 3/8 of its spatial period its contrast envelope, a second-order pattern, moves in the opposite direction to its luminance waveform. Observers report that the pattern moves in the direction ...
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Nachmias J - - 1999
Thresholds were measured for detecting 4 cpd gratings added to maskers consisting of nine sinusoidal components spanning 1 octave around the signal frequency. Phases of all mask components were randomized on every presentation. To assess their importance, contrast differences were either rendered unreliable by introducing contrast jitter between-intervals, or eliminated ...
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Benardete E A - - 1999
The retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) of the primate form at least two classes--M and P--that differ fundamentally in their functional properties. M cells have temporal-frequency response characteristics distinct from P cells (Benardete et al., 1992; Lee et al., 1994). In this paper, we elaborate on the temporal-frequency responses of M ...
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Ishihara M - - 1999
The effects of luminance contrast and spatial frequency on the motion aftereffect were investigated. The point of subjective equality for velocity was measured as an index of the motion aftereffect. The largest effect was observed when a low contrast grating (5%) was presented as a test stimulus after adaptation to ...
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Zapf H R - - 1999
BACKGROUND: The pattern electroretinogram (PERG) amplitude is believed to be linearly related to contrast. In the context of analyzing the effects of media opacities on the PERG, we measured its contrast-amplitude function at various temporal frequencies. METHODS: PERGs were recorded in nine subjects with a checksize of 0.8 degree and ...
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Morgan M J - - 1999
We measured contrast thresholds for detecting the direction of movement of a grating in a two-frame sequence with a quadrature shift between frames. The threshold contrast for the first frame was determined for a range of contrasts of the second frame. As the contrast of the second frame was increased, ...
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García-Pérez M A - - 1999
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Qualitative individual differences in visual processing along various stimulus dimensions have been previously documented. For instance, as compared to the foveal contrast sensitivity function (CSF), the peripheral CSF of some subjects shifts toward lower frequencies, but it scales down for others; also, sensitivity to low spatial frequencies ...
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Mihaylova M - - 1999
Both reaction time (RT) and the latency of the visually evoked potentials (VEP) to grating onset increase with increasing stimulus spatial frequency (SF). At SF higher than 5 c/deg RT increases faster than VEP latency, the difference resulting in a "central delay" (Mihaylova et al., 1999). Due to the equipment ...
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Earle D C - - 1999
Recent work has shown that certain contrast phenomena associated with Glass patterns can be accounted for by filtering mechanisms applied within the luminance or energy domain. Hitherto, these phenomena were regarded as problematic for energy-processing models, and were taken as evidence in support of symbolic-processing accounts. An additional, and controversial, ...
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Blakemore M R - - 1999
The perceived speed of a grating pattern has often been reported to slow as the contrast of the pattern is reduced (though there are some contradictory reports). The mechanism of this perceived slowing has not yet been established nor have the conditions under which the effect occurs (or does not ...
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Bonneh Y - - 1999
Supra-threshold spatial integration was studied by testing the saliency of multi-Gabor element configurations in short duration binocular rivalry (dichoptic masking) conditions. Dichoptic presentations allow for a competition between spatially overlapping supra-threshold stimuli that involve non-overlapping monocular receptive fields in the first stage of visual filtering. Different spatial configurations of Gabor ...
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Burr D C - - 1998
We measured reaction times for detecting motion onset for sinusoidal gratings whose contrast was modulated in either luminance or chromaticity, for various drift rates and contrasts. In general, reaction times to chromatic gratings were slower than to luminance gratings of matched cone contrast, but the difference in response depended critically ...
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Wilcox L M - - 1998
It is well known that stereoacuity for conventional (1st-order) stimuli improves with increasing contrast with an approximate slope of -0.5 on log-log axes (Halpern DL, Blake RR. Perception 1988;17:483-495; Legge GE, Gu Y. Vis Res 1989;29:989-1004). In the experiments reported here a variety of stimuli were used (Gabor patches, amplitude ...
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Watanabe A - - 1998
Chromatic discrimination thresholds were measured under conditions which yielded fine and degraded discrimination steps. Discrimination was assessed by identification of the location of one of four homogeneous equiluminant stimuli arranged in a square or with pseudoisochromatic (PIC) figures using the stimulus design of Regan, Reffin and Mollon (Vis Res 1994; ...
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Whitaker D - - 1998
Using an alignment task, we investigate the role of suprathreshold contrast upon the perceived location of asymmetric Gaussian-windowed stimuli. A model which extracts the centroid of the stimulus envelope between limits defined by contrast threshold accounts well for the observed variation in perceived position. This finding helps to explain previous ...
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Alexander K R - - 1998
We evaluated the effect of substitutive noise on contrast sensitivity within the context of linear (Fourier) and nonlinear (non-Fourier) visual processes. Orientation judgments for D6 (sixth spatial derivative of Gaussian) patterns were obtained from three visually normal subjects when random regions of the target and background were occluded by small ...
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Williams S M - - 1998
In this second part of our study on the mechanism of perceived brightness, we explore the effects of manipulating three-dimensional geometry. The additional scenes portrayed here demonstrate that the same luminance profile can elicit different sensations of brightness as a function of how the objects in the scene are arranged ...
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Schor C M - - 1998
The tuning of the transient-stereopsis system to luminance contrast and spatial-frequency (SF) was investigated with narrow-band gabor targets with a constant sigma of 1 degree. They were presented for brief (140 ms) durations and subtended a large (6 degrees) disparity. When dichoptic gabor stimuli were matched in SF (0-5 cpd), ...
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Dannemiller J L - - 1998
Contrast masking may in part reflect the operation of contrast gain control mechanisms in the visual system. Four experiments were conducted in order to examine contrast discrimination under conditions in which the base contrast was interrupted with various maskers. Interrupting the base contrast grating at 8 Hz--with a uniform field, ...
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Hemmi J M - - 1998
The visual acuity of the tammar wallaby was estimated using a behavioural discrimination task. The wallabies were trained to discriminate a high-contrast (86%) square-wave grating from a grey field of equal luminance (1000-6000 cd m-2). Visual-evoked cortical potentials were used to measure the complete contrast sensitivity function. The stimulus was ...
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Smith A T - - 1998
There is considerable evidence for the existence of a specialized mechanism in human vision for detecting moving contrast modulations and some evidence for a mechanism for detecting moving stereoscopic depth modulations. It is unclear whether a single second-order motion mechanism detects both types of stimulus or whether they are detected ...
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Cropper S J - - 1998
The data presented in this paper examine the ability of observers to detect a modulation in the contrast of chromatic and luminance gratings as a function of the carrier contrast, duration, and spatial frequency. The nature of the signal underlying this ability is investigated by examining both the paradigm used ...
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Jacobs Robert J - - 1998
BACKGROUND: New Zealand Police regulations (1996) allow the unaided visual acuity requirement of 6/12 to be achieved following refractive surgery (except radial keratotomy or keratoplasty) provided applicants also achieve normal (95 per cent confidence limit data from the literature): glare disability, contrast sensitivity, and low luminance visual acuity, one year ...
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Kuyk T - - 1998
PURPOSE: To determine the effects of reducing light level from photopic to mesopic on performance of real world mobility tasks and how performance of these tasks relates to measures of visual sensory and perceptual function. METHODS: The visual functions, acuity, peak letter contrast sensitivity, visual field extent, glare disability, color ...
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Shevell S K - - 1998
Chromatic induction from a surrounding light is measured with an additional remote field outside the surround. Chromatic induction from the surround into a central test field is found to be attenuated by a remote inhomogeneous 'checkerboard', composed of squares at two different chromaticities. A uniform remote field, on the other ...
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Snowden R J - - 1998
Perceived contrast, contrast detection thresholds and contrast discrimination thresholds were measured in the presence and absence of surrounding patterns of a similar spatio-temporal makeup. In the foveal retina we found that the perceived contrast of the central pattern was reduced by the presence of the contrast surrounds with the effect ...
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Demb J B - - 1998
The relationship between reading ability and psychophysical performance was examined to test the hypothesis that dyslexia is associated with a deficit in the magnocellular (M) pathway. Speed discrimination thresholds and contrast detection thresholds were measured under conditions (low mean luminance, low spatial frequency, high temporal frequency) for which psychophysical performance ...
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Chen Z - - 1998
"Dark beams" are nonuniform optical beams that contain either a one-dimensional (1D) dark stripe or a two-dimensional (2D) dark hole resulting from a phase singularity or an amplitude depression in their optical field. Thus far, self-trapped dark beams (dark solitons) have been observed using coherent light only. Here, self-trapped dark ...
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Randolph S E - - 1998
Quantitative analyses of vector-borne parasite systems are dominated by insect systems. In attempts to formulate general statements concerning vectors and their indirectly transmitted parasites, ticks are usually ignored or they are implicitly or explicitly assumed to obey the same rules as insects. Here, Sarah Randolph shows that contrasting biological attributes ...
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Eckstein M P - - 1998
RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVES: Developing metrics of medical image quality requires an understanding of how anatomic backgrounds reduce human visual detection performance. Visual psychophysics has shown that there are two distinct ways in which a complex background can degrade performance: (1) the presence of a deterministic high-contrast background, (2) variability in ...
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