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Results 401 - 450 of 876
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Chronicle E P - - 1995
Square-wave gratings with particular spatial characteristics induce visual illusions. Patients with migraine are particularly susceptible to these illusions and report discomfort. Their discomfort tends to be greater when the gratings are illuminated by red light, a tendency not shown by controls. Gratings that induce illusions have been found to impair ...
Artal P - - 1995
Reversals in perceived direction of motion of a grating when its spatial frequency exceeds half that of the sampling mosaic provide a potential tool for estimating sampling frequency in peripheral retina. We used two-alternative forced-choice tasks to measure performance of three observers detecting or discriminating direction of motion of high ...
Xu J - - 1995
We reported an experimental study of holographic recording and signal light amplification through higherorder diffracted waves from holographic gratings recorded in an acceptor-donor-substituted azobenzene-doped poly(methyl methacrylate) thin film.
Greenlee M W - - 1995
Neurophysiological studies indicate the existence of an area in the extrastriate monkey cortex specialized for the processing of stimulus motion. The present investigation was conducted to determine whether a homologous area exits in the human cortex that underlies the processing and short-term storage of velocity information. Contrast detection and velocity ...
Watson A B - - 1995
Contrast energy thresholds were measured for discriminating the direction of a drifting sinusoidal grating multiplied by an independently drifting space-time Gaussian (a generalized Gabor). We argue that the stimulus with the lowest contrast energy threshold identifies the receptive field of the most efficient linear motion filter. This optimal motion stimulus ...
Alais D - - 1995
The stimuli in these experiments are square-wave luminance gratings with an array of small random dots covering the high-luminance regions. Owing to the texture, the direction of these gratings, when seen through a circular aperture, is disambiguated because the visual system is provided with an unambiguous motion energy. Thus, the ...
Solomon J A - - 1995
STIMULI. The 1st-order stimuli are moving sine gratings. The 2nd-order stimuli are fields of static visual texture, whose contrasts are modulated by moving sine gratings. Neither the spatial slant (orientation) nor the direction of motion of these 2nd-order (microbalanced) stimuli can be detected by a Fourier analysis; they are invisible ...
García-Pérez M A - - 1995
A wealth of detection data can be accounted for by a spatial-vision model including a finite number of space-variant, spatial-frequency and orientation-selective channels of varying gains coupled with a detection rule involving probability summation over space and among channels. This paper shows that the detection of large-area, foveally fixated sine-wave ...
Bilotta J - - 1995
DL-2-amino-4-phosphonobutyric acid (APB) reduces the sensitivity of ON- and OFF-responses in goldfish retina, although the ON-responses are reduced significantly more than the OFF-responses. This paper describes the effects of APB on behavioral sensitivity of goldfish to spatial sinusoidal gratings. Fish were classically conditioned to suppress respiration upon presentation of gratings ...
Wright M J - - 1995
Thresholds were measured for discrimination of direction of a step angular rotation of gratings. The addition of simultaneous phase displacements (translation) had little effect on rotation thresholds for gratings over a considerable range; discrimination of rotation is unaffected by random directional translations an order of magnitude larger. Angular rotation discrimination ...
Vassilev A - - 1995
It two gratings differ in a higher harmonic only, grating identification is expected to depend on that harmonic detection. Yet the comparison of data from several studies suggests that pattern adaptation might differently affect detection and identification. In order to verify this dissociation, a study was made of the effects ...
Ichihara S - - 1995
Three experiments on temporal-discontinuity detection were carried out. In experiment 1, temporal-discontinuity thresholds were measured for sinusoidal gratings by the use of the double-staircase method. A sinusoidal grating was presented twice successively. The subject judged whether or not an interval was present. The temporal-discontinuity threshold increased as the spatial frequency ...
Virsu V - - 1994
We studied pattern perceptions caused by drifting gratings presented monocularly in the nasal and temporal visual fields at various suprathreshold contrasts. The grating and its surround and background were matched in luminance. Small grating produced illusions and reduced perceptions. When grating area or contrast increased from a subthreshold value, the ...
Burke D - - 1994
A number of recent studies have suggested that the "intersection of constraints" model of two dimensional motion perception, put forward by Adelson and Movshon [(1982) Nature, 300, 523-525], is incomplete. Evidence has been mounting that there is a second two-dimensional motion sensitive mechanism which is monocular and which appears to ...
Grigsby S S - - 1994
A variety of recent physiological and psychophysical experiments provide evidence for a large asymmetry between nasal and temporal processing outside of the central 40 degrees of visual field. Binocular processing has also been found to be reduced outside of this region even though the individual left and right eye fields ...
Peachey N S - - 1994
The present study examined how the response characteristics of the visual evoked potential (VEP) varied during the course of trials using a sinusoidal grating stimulus that reversed contrast in a square-wave manner. To accomplish this, amplitude and phase values were derived in short segments during the course of continuous stimulation ...
Lundh B L - - 1994
Contrast thresholds for static and dynamic (phase-shifted at 2 rps) sinusoidal gratings were established for seven spatial frequencies 0.5-32 c/deg. An HP-85 desktop computer ran an automated stimulus descending algorithm. Subjects reported stimulus presence by pressing a switch. Two stimulus presentation designs were used. In method 1, the screen was ...
Culham J C - - 1994
Two experiments demonstrated motion capture of luminance-defined dots by gratings with no net luminance-based motion. In a series of two-frame experimental trials, we superimposed bright dots and a color grating rotating in opposite directions. Capture was observed at equiluminance and was facilitated by the presence of color in gratings over ...
Yang J - - 1994
Contrast sensitivity functions were measured in two ways: by counterphase modulation; and by in-phase modulation, in which the luminance of every point of a spatial grating was sinusoidally modulated in phase with one another. Contrast sensitivity functions measured by counterphase modulated gratings show spatiotemporal interactions that represent bandpass filtering. Contrast ...
Zhang Y - - 1994
We investigate the photorefractive response time of diffraction gratings in Rb(+)-doped KNbO(3) crystals. Two components of charge carriers, with different response times, are found to contribute to the photoinduced index gratings. One component, which contributes to approximately 70% of the index grating, shows a submillisecond rise time when the total ...
Grzywacz N M - - 1994
Biological visual systems can detect positional changes that are finer than these systems' acuity to sine-wave gratings, a property known as hyperacuity. Some systems can even detect changes finer that the photoreceptor spacing. We report here that rabbit's directionally selective ganglion cells not only detect positional changes in the hyperacuity ...
Sugg B - - 1994
A new holographic observation technique for 180° domains is demonstrated with a cerium-doped strontium barium niobate sample containing two antiparallel ferroelectric domains. The method relies on the fact that the phase shift of holographically written refractive-index gratings is +π/2 or -π/2 with respect to the initial light interference pattern depending ...
Henning G B - - 1994
The perceived speed, temporal frequency, and spatial frequency of matched colour and luminance gratings were compared in separate experiments. The large factor by which colour gratings are perceived to be slower moving than matched luminance gratings cannot be explained by systematic differences in the perceived spatial frequency or in the ...
Lacerda M M - - 1994
The position and the width of the chi((2)) grating in a frequency-doubling fiber were studied during the preparation process. The peak of the grating moves several centimeters from the input end to the output end of the fiber before the conversion efficiency saturates. On saturation, the grating moves toward the ...
Gaska J P - - 1994
White noise stimuli were used to estimate second-order kernels for complex cells in cortical area V1 of the macaque monkey, and drifting grating stimuli were presented to the sample of neurons to obtain orientation and spatial-frequency tuning curves. Using these data, we quantified how well second-order kernels predict the normalized ...
Glantz R M - - 1994
1. Intracellular recordings, sine wave gratings, and paired flashes were used to characterize the directional selectivity (DS) of the peripheral neurons of the crayfish visual pathway. DS was observed in nonspiking tangential (Tan1) neurons of the distal medulla externa and it is expressed by the amplitude of the modulated synaptic ...
Collischon M - - 1994
A reflection grating with a binary surface profile is presented that has high diffraction efficiency. The measured intensity for the + 1st diffracted order was 77%. The binary grating is composed of a minilattice with feature sizes comparable with the wavelength of the incident light. The overall structure is designed ...
Zhang H - - 1994
A two-step proton-exchange process to produce waveguides and gratings in lithium niobate is described. In both steps, mixtures of lithium benzoate and benzoic acid are used. The fabricated components are characterized at 0.633 and 0.422 µm. In particular, we observe that the light intensity diffracted into the air by the ...
Glantz R M - - 1994
1. The graded, synaptic potentials of first-order visual interneurons (lamina monopolar cells) were examined with intracellular recordings. The spatiotemporal properties were characterized with drifting sine wave gratings and annuli. 2. Annulus-elicited inhibition is maximal for annulus-test pulse intervals of approximately 140 ms and declines exponentially. The inhibition declines with increasing ...
Hibino K - - 1994
The aberrations of hyperbolic diffraction gratings produced with two spherical waves are analyzed theoretically and experimentally. The behavior of these gratings in collimated illumination indicates that for a grating of a given size there is a critical spatial frequency above which the aberration remains constant for all spatial frequencies. Aberrations ...
Rovamo J - - 1994
PURPOSE: The human foveal visual system in a detection task was recently modeled as a simple image processor comprising low-pass filtering due to the optical modulation transfer function of the eye, high-pass filtering (lateral inhibition) due to the neural modulation transfer function of visual pathways, addition of internal neural noise, ...
Gyoba J - - 1994
The visibility of stationary phantoms was measured by human observers in two experiments. The phantom visibility declined with the increase of the mean luminance of black/white inducing gratings, falling near to zero at a mean luminance high above 80 cd/m2. The phantoms also disappeared when the red/green inducing gratings were ...
Näsänen R - - 1994
Detection efficiencies were measured for two kinds of grating stimuli. The stimuli of the first kind were uniform square shaped cosine gratings of various sizes but of constant spatial frequency. The stimuli of the second kind were composed of nine small grating patches of the same spatial frequency arranged into ...
Wolf-Oberhollenzer F - - 1994
1. Single-unit responses to large-field movement (angular velocity, w = 0.25-42 degrees/s) of sine-wave gratings of different spatial wavelength (lambda = 5.2-41 degrees) and contrast have been recorded in the nucleus of the basal optic root (nBOR) of the accessory optic system (AOS) of the pigeon. 2. The steady-state response ...
McCarthy J - - 1994
Detection and direction discrimination experiments were conducted with luminance and flicker gratings. The flicker gratings had bars made up of static random pixels interspersed between other bars with flickering random pixels. All experiments were carried out in peripheral vision with grating images centered at 8 deg eccentricity in the superior ...
Livingstone M S - - 1994
Though experience tells us we can perceive depth in dim light, it is not so obvious that one of the chief mechanisms for depth perception, stereopsis, is possible under scotopic conditions. The only studies on human stereopsis in the dark adapted state seem to be those of Nagel [(1902) Zeitschrift ...
Victor J D - - 1994
A man with presumed posterior cortical atrophy had a markedly elevated threshold for orientation discrimination (approx. 25 deg) and selective impairment of "pop-out" tasks based on orientation. Direction discrimination for moving plaids was superior to direction discrimination for their component gratings. The superior performance for plaids disappeared when the spatial ...
Hammond P - - 1994
Width summation of complex neurones in cat striate cortex was assessed for moving sine-wave gratings. Summation was restricted in special complex neurones, approximately matched receptive field width in intermediate complex neurones and exceeded it in most standard complex neurones. Responses to preferred and opposite directions of motion were compared: 12 ...
Tappe T - - 1994
The effect of the spatial frequency (SF) of visual gratings on reaction time (RT) and temporal-order judgment (TOJ) was examined in three experiments. In experiment 1 the visual stimuli were vertical sinusoidal gratings with SFs between 2 and 8 cycles deg-1 and the comparison stimulus in the TOJ task was ...
Cropper S J - - 1994
It is commonly assumed that the ability to discriminate velocity in a stimulus directly reflects the properties of the underlying directionally-selective mechanism. The results presented here show that this assumption is not always correct. Speed discrimination tasks over a range of base velocities were carried out for luminance gratings, chromatic ...
McCourt M E - - 1993
In order to assess the contribution of high spatial frequency channels (i.e. local, edge-dependent mechanisms) to the grating induction effect, grating induction magnitude was measured as a function of systematic amounts of blurring of the inducing/test field boundary for four test field heights which spanned a two octave range (0.25-2.0 ...
Coletta N J - - 1993
An observer's ability to discriminate the angular direction of a moving grating depends on the grating orientation. Observers can more accurately judge the angular direction of vertical or horizontal gratings than oblique gratings. We discovered that this oblique effect becomes very large at high spatial frequencies in the parafovea. Perceived ...
Zhang J - - 1993
When a moving aperture contains a drifting grating, the perception of aperture movement is strongly affected by the grating movement. We have studied this interaction, using a moving circular patch of sinusoidal grating matched to the background in mean luminance. The circular window, or aperture, could be defined either by ...
Plant G T - - 1993
Unilateral damage to the lateral occipital region in humans can give rise to impaired motion perception in the contralateral visual field [Plant et al. (1993), Brain, 116, 1303-1335]. We report the following characteristics of the residual vision. (i) Spatial acuity and spatial frequency discrimination are not affected. (ii) Contrast thresholds ...
Rovamo J - - 1993
We modelled the human foveal visual system in a detection task as a simple image processor comprising (i) low-pass filtering due to the optical transfer function of the eye, (ii) high-pass filtering of neural origin, (iii) addition of internal neural noise, and (iv) detection by a local matched filter. Its ...
Plant G T - - 1993
Contrast thresholds for a number of tasks were measured in the contralateral and ipsilateral upper quadrants of the visual field (eccentricity = 10 degrees) before and after an occipito-parietal surgical resection, in one patient, carried out for intractable epilepsy. Postoperatively the contrast thresholds for discriminating the speed of movement of ...
Chen H W - - 1993
Methods are presented for analyzing the low-order stimulus-response cross-correlation functions (or kernels) of visual neurons studied with spatiotemporal white noise. In particular, formulas are derived that relate the low-order kernels of a cell to its responses to single-drifting, double-drifting, and counterphase gratings. The harmonic response terms contributed by the low-order ...
Mustonen J - - 1993
Contrast sensitivity was measured as a function of retinal illuminance (I) for vertical cosine gratings of various circular areas (A) and spatial frequencies (f < or = 4 c/deg). Spatial frequency and grating diameter varied in inverse proportion to each other in order to keep the relative grating area (A ...
Derrington A M - - 1993
We measured the ability of human observers to discriminate the direction of motion of different spatial patterns presented for durations ranging from 0.021 to 0.67 sec. The patterns were: (1) a vertical grating (spatial frequency 0.93 c/deg at 5% contrast); (2) a "beat" pattern made by adding vertical gratings of ...
Reddy B R - - 1993
Optical phase conjugate wave generation in Coumarin 314-doped polycarbonate resin is investigated by using 488-nm light for writing the grating and 632.8-nm light for reading it. The observed oscillatory behavior of grating growth as a function of writing time is attributed to heating effects.
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