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Derrington A M - - 1993
At durations shorter than about 150 msec, a complex grating comprising a static 1-c/deg grating and a moving 3-c/deg grating is perceived as moving in the direction opposite that of the physical direction of motion. Here the phenomenon is further examined by measuring the perceived direction of motion of the ...
Teller D Y - - 1993
Under some conditions, moving isoluminant stimuli perceptually slow down or even appear to stop. The purpose of the experiment was to explore the shape of the motion dead zone, the region of color space over which the perception of stopped motion occurs. Subjects viewed a small patch of moving grating ...
Greenlee M W - - 1993
Behavioral and neurophysiological studies in macaque monkeys suggest a role of the inferior temporal cortex in pattern discrimination and visual memory. To determine whether this cortical area is also involved in human short-term visual memory, we measured spatial frequency discrimination thresholds for sequentially presented stimuli in 17 patients with unilateral, ...
Palmer J - - 1993
Under some conditions, direction-of-motion thresholds are elevated with respect to detection thresholds for isoluminant chromatic stimuli. In the present study we investigated the effect of small luminance mismatches on ratios of direction-of-motion thresholds to detection thresholds (M/D ratios). The stimuli were 2 deg x 2 deg patches of a moving ...
Webster M A - - 1993
We compared how contrast adaptation influences three alternative measures of luminous efficiency. Subjects judged the lightness, the flicker, or the motion of chromatic sine-wave gratings. Adaptation to gratings with correlated luminance and chromatic contrast strongly biases lightness matches and moderately biases minimum-motion settings for gratings that are counterphased at 1 ...
Hu Q - - 1993
A test-pedestal approach, with a test grating superimposed on a masking pedestal, was used to compare sinusoidal grating vernier acuity and contrast discrimination thresholds. The goal is to develop a simple model for vernier acuity without assumptions about underlying mechanisms. In the contrast discrimination task, subjects were asked to detect ...
Brown J M - - 1993
Moving phantom visibility was measured for subjects with a fundus classified as either lightly or darkly pigmented. The phantom-inducing pattern was a black-and-white square-wave grating drifting continuously from left to right, with a black horizontal occluder interrupting the middle of the grating. Moving phantom visibility was significantly reduced for darker ...
Ofri R - - 1993
Electrophysiological responses of the retina to a series of grating stimuli (6-768 min of arc/phase) were recorded in seven sessions using normal Beagles and in 21 sessions using Beagles afflicted with inherited glaucoma. A 15 degrees and a 30 degrees field, centered around the animal's area centralis, were used to ...
Derrington A M - - 1993
Human observers were required to discriminate the direction of motion of vertically moving, 1 c/deg luminance and colour gratings. The gratings had different contrasts and moved at temporal frequencies between 0.5 and 32 Hz. Sensitivity [the reciprocal of the contrast at which performance reached 75% correct in a temporal two-alternative ...
O'Malley D M - - 1993
1. Rabbit retinas were isolated from the eye and incubated in the presence of 3H-choline. Samples of retina taken from a defined midperipheral eccentricity were spread over the domed end of a fiberoptic bundle that formed the floor of a superfusion chamber. The rate of release of labeled acetylcholine by ...
Gallant J L - - 1993
The neural basis of pattern recognition is a central problem in visual neuroscience. Responses of single cells were recorded in area V4 of macaque monkey to three classes of periodic stimuli that are based on spatial derivative operators: polar (concentric and radial), hyperbolic, and conventional sinusoidal (Cartesian) gratings. Of 118 ...
Whitaker D - - 1993
Vernier acuity was measured using a pair of long, abutting vertical sinusoidal luminance gratings. Performance was also measured for pairs of thin horizontal strips of grating whose vertical separation was varied in order to represent different parts of the original grating. At small strip separations, performance was equivalent to that ...
Kelly D H - - 1993
Several types of measurement were made of the negative afterimages formed by viewing chromatic and achromatic sine-wave conditioning gratings that were stabilized on the retina. We varied the spatial frequency, contrast, and duration of the conditioning stimulus and the interval between its offset and the afterimage measurement. Different methods of ...
Mussap A J - - 1993
The barber-pole illusion and its influence on plaid perception were investigated in two experiments to test the following expectations: (i) apertures which bias the perception of grating motion in directions consistent with plaid direction will facilitate plaid perception, and (ii) apertures which bias the perception of grating motion in directions ...
Bressan P - - 1993
When a plaid pattern composed of a stationary vertical grating and a horizontally drifting diagonal grating is shown behind a circular aperture, the pattern appears to move coherently in a vertical direction. When the bars of the stationary grating are narrower than those of the moving grating, only the latter ...
Pantle A - - 1992
Visual motion processes were studied with luminance- and contrast-modulated gratings. A sine-wave luminance grating was displaced abruptly back and forth by 3/16 cycle. The display sequence is ambiguous in that each 3/16-cycle phase shift (short-path motion) could just as readily be seen as a 13/16-cycle shift (long-path motion) in the ...
Kitterle F L - - 1992
Observers classified sine-wave and square-wave gratings on the basis of fundamental frequency (Are the bars wide or narrow?) or on the basis of higher harmonic frequencies (Are the bars sharp or fuzzy?). Stimuli were presented in either the left (LVF) or right (RVF) visual field. When the classification was made ...
Pasternak T - - 1992
The contribution of cat area 18 to spatiotemporal sensitivity and to motion processing was assessed in cats with unilateral ibotenic acid lesions placed in physiologically identified portions of area 18. The lesions were centered in the representation of the lower right visual field, about 10 degrees from the vertical meridian. ...
Wesemann W - - 1992
Observer sensitivity to oscillatory step displacements of sine-wave gratings was investigated at various loci in the visual field (0-30 degrees) as a function of contrast. Detection thresholds at 10 Hz and high grating contrasts were approximately 11-15 arcsec in the fovea and 37-47 arcsec at 30 degrees eccentricity. At any ...
Wilson H R - - 1992
Visual discrimination of contour curvature was investigated by using contours defined by the locus of points at which the phase of a square-wave grating was shifted by 180 degrees (a texture boundary). Curvature-increment thresholds were measured for contour curvatures from 0.31 to 10.65 deg-1, for grating spatial frequencies of 4.0 ...
Harris J P - - 1992
Two experiments were carried out to test the hypothesis, based on anatomical evidence, that contrast gain might be reduced in the retinal periphery in Parkinson's disease. In the first experiment, subjects set contrast thresholds before and after adaptation to a vertical grating of 2 cycles per degree (c/deg), either stationary ...
Victor J D - - 1992
We examined the perceptual coherence of two-component moving plaids. The gratings that constituted the plaids were either standard Fourier gratings (F), in which luminance was determined by a drifting sinusoid, or non-Fourier gratings (NF), in which the contrast of a random background was modulated by a drifting sinusoid. These NF ...
Cavanagh P - - 1992
Two "attentive" tracking tasks reveal the existence of an attention-based motion process. In the first task, oppositely rotating luminance and color gratings were superimposed. Because of masking from the color grating, the bars of the luminance grating were not visible; nevertheless, their motion was visible and it determined the perceived ...
Nordmann J P - - 1992
Contrast sensitivities were determined for sinusoidal gratings of varying spatial frequencies with and without the presence of a random noise pattern superimposed on the gratings. Control subjects with normal binocular vision and observers with amblyopia were tested to determine the relative effects of noise on contrast sensitivity. For both amblyopes ...
Tanone A - - 1992
The joint-transform power spectrum of two identical objects can be represented as a one-dimensional sinusoidal grating modulated by a Fourier transform, and the correlation peaks can be regarded as the first-order diffraction of the grating. The peak intensity and the width are then determined by the aperture and the modulation ...
Stone L S - - 1992
When two parallel gratings moving at the same speed are presented simultaneously, the lower-contrast grating appears slower. This misperception is evident across a wide range of contrasts (2.5-50%) and does not appear to saturate (e.g. a 50% contrast grating appears slower than a 70% contrast grating moving at the same ...
Demello L R - - 1992
The performance of 6 domestic hens on a visual acuity task was studied using a spatial discrete-trial conditional discrimination procedure. Gray stimuli and vertical square-wave gratings, ranging in spatial frequency from 1 to 10 cycles per millimeter, were presented in a descending and ascending series of probes. On each trial, ...
Yo C - - 1992
Coherent plaid motion is produced by superimposing two one-dimensional gratings of the same spatial frequency moving +/- 60 degrees from the intersection-of-constraints (IOC) resultant direction. These moving plaids were found to change the perceived direction of a third one-dimensional grating, either 6-fold lower or higher in spatial frequency, from traveling ...
Stanzione P - - 1992
A peculiar deficit of electrophysiological retinal responses to pattern reversal grating stimuli has been reported in Parkinson's disease (PD) patients. A similar abnormality has been reproduced by means of non-selective dopaminergic antagonists in normal humans. Aim of this study was to verify, by means of a selective D2 antagonist (sulpiride) ...
Lankheet M J - - 1992
The spatiotemporal properties of cat horizontal (H-) cells were studied by recording the intracellular responses in the optically intact, in vivo, eye to sinusoidal gratings at a photopic mean illumination level. In order to investigate the linearity of spatial summation a "null test" was performed in which the responses to ...
Scialfa C T - - 1992
Contrast thresholds for sinusoidal gratings of 1.5-18 cpd were measured in young (M = 24 years) and older adults (M = 69 years). Thresholds were determined for stationary gratings, and for gratings that traveled along a circular path at 5, 10, and 15 deg/sec. For static gratings, age differences in ...
Solgaard O - - 1992
A new type of light modulator, the deformable grating modulator, based on electrically controlling the amplitude of a micromachined phase grating is described. Mechanical motion of one quarter of a wavelength is sufficient for switching in this device. The small mechanical motion allows the use of structures with high mechanical ...
Vachss F - - 1992
We demonstrate a technique by which the temporal oscillations in the response of a photorefractive square-law converter, a recently developed high-contrast spatial light modulator, may be removed. This technique uses the translation of an amplitude grating incoherently imaged upon a photorefractive crystal to obtain a moving intensity pattern within the ...
Barbur J L - - 1992
Pupillary responses to stimuli which favour the preferential stimulation of neural mechanisms involved in the detection of visual attributes such as colour, spatial structure, movement and light flux changes on the retina have been measured and compared. Pupil responses to a decrement in stimulus luminance (i.e., a flash of darkness), ...
Derrington A M - - 1992
The sum of two differently orientated moving sinusoidal gratings of similar spatial frequency, contrast, and velocity appears as a single coherent "plaid" pattern. The visual system is thought to analyse the motion of plaids in two stages, first analysing the motion of the (1-D) components, and then calculating a speed ...
Rovamo J - - 1992
Using computer graphics and a two-alternative forced-choice method we measured threshold contrast as a function of viewing distance, spatial frequency, and eccentricity for gratings with and without added, white two-dimensional spatial noise. Our experiments showed that in spatial noise contrast sensitivity was independent of viewing distance as long as contrast ...
Thomas J P - - 1992
Observers discriminated between a plaid pattern formed by summing vertical and horizontal cosine gratings, and a plaid formed by multiplying the gratings. Such patterns are alike with respect to many non-Fourier primitives, but differ in the Fourier domain by diagonal components which are present in the plaid formed by multiplication, ...
Gilbert C - - 1992
In fleshflies, Sarcophaga bullata, intracellular recording and Lucifer yellow dye-filling have revealed small-field elements of sexually isomorphic retinotopic arrays in the lobula and lobula plate, the axons of which project to premotor channels in the deutocerebrum that supply head-turning and flight-steering motor neurons. The dendrites of the small-field elements visit ...
Greenlee M W - - 1992
Two experiments were conducted to explore the ability of human observers to discriminate the spatial frequency of briefly-presented, Gaussian-truncated sinewave gratings. In the first experiment, the influence of stimulus contrast and stimulus bandwidth on discrimination thresholds was measured after removing any position cues by randomizing the spatial phase of the ...
du Buf J M - - 1992
Matching either the centre-brightness or the apparent contrast of incremental 1-deg disks, with varying edge-sharpness, yields quite different results. These suggest that the maximum brightness gradient at the edge determines apparent-contrast perception. However, no significant differences are found in matching the brightness maxima, the brightness minima, or the apparent contrast ...
Grabowska A - - 1992
The study aimed at testing, by a visual evoked potential method, the hypothesis of the hemispheric specialization in processing of high and low-spatial frequencies. Twenty four right-handed subjects (12 males and 12 females) were presented with square-wave vertical gratings of various spatial frequencies (0.67, 0.86, 1.20, 2.00, 2.40, 3.00, 3.30, ...
Wright M J - - 1992
Lower motion thresholds for discriminating opposing motion directions were compared for one dimensional (grating) and two dimensional (plaid) stimuli in central and peripheral vision. The results were consistent with a two-stage model of motion sensitivity in which threshold-limiting noise occurs at both stages, and the speed as well as the ...
Baro J A - - 1992
Since visible persistence of grating patterns increases with spatial frequency, it is often inferred that the perceived duration of a grating is also longer at higher spatial frequencies. However, other work has demonstrated that the perceived onset of a grating is also delayed at higher spatial frequencies. Thus it is ...
Day R H - - 1992
The McCollough effect was shown to be spatial-frequency selective by Lovegrove and Over (1972) after adaptation with vertical colored square-wave gratings separated by 1 octave. Adaptation with slide-presented red and green vertical square-wave gratings separated by 1 octave failed to produce contingent color aftereffects (CAEs). However, when each of these ...
Stork W - - 1991
Zero-order gratings are grating structures with a period that is small compared with the wavelength of light. Only the directly transmitted or reflected light, the zero diffraction order, is nonevanescent and propagates in a distance from the grating. Thus the grating behaves like a slab of ordinary homogeneous material with ...
Chorlton M C - - 1991
Differential motion thresholds were measured at eccentricities of 9 degrees and 16.6 degrees using computer-generated sinusoidal gratings. Three spatial frequencies (0.51, 0.25, and 0.13 cycles/deg) were examined at reference velocities of 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, and 48 deg/sec. Minimum differential velocity thresholds were between 20 and 30% of the ...
Chang C W - - 1991
The tested light is projected onto an arrangement composed of two special spiral gratings, in which the second spiral grating is positioned at the Talbot image of the first one. From the shapes of the resultant moiré fringes, the quality of collimation of the tested light can be easily checked.
Aiken J - - 1991
Liquid crystal television (LCTV) continues to play a useful role as a spatial light modulator in the development and evaluation of systems for optical image processing. We outline new addressing electronics developed for a commercially available LCTV that permit writing to individual pixels at an improved display up-date rate and ...
Wenderoth P - - 1991
One-dimensional (1-D) orientation illusions induced on a test grating by a tilted and surrounding 1-D inducing grating have a well-known angular function that exhibits both repulsion and attraction effects. Two-dimensional (2-D) orientation illusions are those induced on a test grating by 2-D image modulation, such as a pair of superimposed ...
Gupta M C - - 1991
Theoretical and experimental results are presented for the diffraction of light by doubly periodic structures that consist of two gratings separated by a uniform thin film. We observe the appearance of many diffracted beams that are due to the interactions through evanescent fields between the two gratings.
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