FULL-WAVE AND HALF-WAVE RECTIFICATION IN 2ND-ORDER MOTION PERCEPTION

被引:61
作者
SOLOMON, JA
SPERLING, G
机构
[1] UNIV CALIF IRVINE,DEPT COGNIT SCI,IRVINE,CA 92717
[2] NASA,AMES RES CTR,MOFFETT FIELD,CA 94035
关键词
MOTION; NON-FOURIER MOTION; RECTIFICATION; TRANSPARENCY; ATTENTION;
D O I
10.1016/0042-6989(94)90105-8
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Microbalanced stimuli are dynamic displays which do not stimulate motion mechanisms that apply standard (Fourier-energy or autocorrelational) motion analysis directly to the visual signal. In order to extract motion information from microbalanced stimuli, Chubb and Sperling [(1988) Journal of the Optical Society of America, 5, 1986-2006] proposed that the human visual system performs a rectifying transformation on the visual signal prior to standard motion analysis. The current research employs two novel types of microbalanced stimuli: half-wave stimuli preserve motion information following half-wave rectification (with a threshold) but lose motion information following full-wave rectification; full-wave stimuli preserve motion information following full-wave rectification but lose motion information following half-wave rectification. Additionally, Fourier stimuli, ordinary square-wave gratings, were used to stimulate standard motion mechanisms. Psychometric functions (direction discrimination vs stimulus contrast) were obtained for each type of stimulus when presented alone, and when masked by each of the other stimuli (presented as moving masks and also as nonmoving, counterphase-flickering masks). Results: given sufficient contrast, all three types of stimulus convey motion. However, only one-third of the population can perceive the motion of the half-wave stimulus. Observers are able to process the motion information contained in the Fourier stimulus slightly more efficiently than the information in the full-wave stimulus but are much less efficient in processing half-wave motion information. Moving masks are more effective than counterphase masks at hampering direction discrimination, indicating that some of the masking effect is interference between motion mechanisms, and some occurs at earlier stages. When either full-wave and Fourier or half-wave and Fourier gratings are presented simultaneously, there is a wide range of relative contrasts within which the motion directions of both gratings are easily determinable. Conversely, when half-wave and full-wave gratings are combined, the direction of only one of these gratings can be determined with high accuracy. Conclusions: the results indicate that three motion computations are carried out, any two in parallel: one standard (''first order'') and two non-Fourier (''second-order'') computations that employ full-wave and half-wave rectification.
引用
收藏
页码:2239 / 2257
页数:19
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