Shading and texture: separate information channels with a common adaptation mechanism?

被引:27
作者
Georgeson, MA [1 ]
Schofield, AJ [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Birmingham, Sch Psychol, Birmingham B15 2TT, W Midlands, England
来源
SPATIAL VISION | 2002年 / 16卷 / 01期
关键词
vision; shading; texture; detection; adaptation; tilt aftereffect; luminance; contrast; modulation;
D O I
10.1163/15685680260433913
中图分类号
Q6 [生物物理学];
学科分类号
071011 ;
摘要
We outline a scheme for the way in which early vision may handle information about shading (luminance modulation, LM) and texture (contrast modulation, CM). Previous work on the detection of gratings has found no sub-threshold summation, and no cross-adaptation, between LM and CM patterns. This strongly implied separate channels for the detection of LM and CM structure. However, we now report experiments in which adapting to LM (or CM) gratings creates tilt aftereffects of similar magnitude on both LM and CM test gratings, and reduces the perceived strength (modulation depth) of LM and CM gratings to a similar extent. This transfer of aftereffects between LM and CM might suggest a second stage of processing at which LM and CM information is integrated. The nature of this integration, however, is unclear and several simple predictions are not fulfilled. Firstly, one might expect the integration stage to lose identity information about whether the pattern was LM or CM. We show instead that the identity of barely detectable LM and CM patterns is not lost. Secondly, when LM and CM gratings are combined in-phase or out-of-phase we find no evidence for cancellation, nor for 'phase-blindness'. These results suggest that information about LM and CM is not pooled or merged- shading is not confused with texture variation. We suggest that LM and CM signals are carried by separate channels, but they share a common adaptation mechanism that accounts for the almost complete transfer of perceptual aftereffects.
引用
收藏
页码:59 / 76
页数:18
相关论文
共 30 条
[1]   ILLUSORY, MOTION, AND LUMINANCE-DEFINED CONTOURS INTERACT IN THE HUMAN VISUAL-SYSTEM [J].
BERKLEY, MA ;
DEBRUYN, B ;
ORBAN, G .
VISION RESEARCH, 1994, 34 (02) :209-216
[2]   STIMULUS SPECIFICITY IN HUMAN VISUAL SYSTEM [J].
BLAKEMORE, C ;
MUNCEY, JPJ ;
RIDLEY, RM .
VISION RESEARCH, 1973, 13 (10) :1915-1931
[3]  
Bruce V., 1996, VISUAL PERCEPTION PH
[4]   DRIFT-BALANCED RANDOM STIMULI - A GENERAL BASIS FOR STUDYING NON-FOURIER MOTION PERCEPTION [J].
CHUBB, C ;
SPERLING, G .
JOURNAL OF THE OPTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA A-OPTICS IMAGE SCIENCE AND VISION, 1988, 5 (11) :1986-2007
[5]  
Georgeson MA, 2000, PERCEPTION, V29, P115
[6]  
GEORGESON M A, 1985, Spatial Vision, V1, P103, DOI 10.1163/156856885X00125
[7]   Adaptation, after-effect and contrast in the perception of tilted lines. I. Quantitative studies [J].
Gibson, JJ ;
Radner, M .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1937, 20 :453-467
[8]  
Graham N. V. S., 1989, VISUAL PATTERN ANAL
[9]   Stereopsis from contrast envelopes [J].
Langley, K ;
Fleet, DJ ;
Hibbard, PB .
VISION RESEARCH, 1999, 39 (14) :2313-2324
[10]   EVIDENCE FOR SEPARATE MOTION-DETECTING MECHANISMS FOR FIRST-ORDER AND 2ND-ORDER MOTION IN HUMAN VISION [J].
LEDGEWAY, T ;
SMITH, AT .
VISION RESEARCH, 1994, 34 (20) :2727-2740