A TARGET IN REAL MOTION APPEARS BLURRED IN THE ABSENCE OF OTHER PROXIMAL MOVING TARGETS

被引:55
作者
CHEN, S
BEDELL, HE
OGMEN, H
机构
[1] UNIV HOUSTON,COLL OPTOMETRY,HOUSTON,TX 77204
[2] UNIV HOUSTON,DEPT ELECT & COMP ENGN,HOUSTON,TX 77204
关键词
VISUAL PERSISTENCE; MOTION BLUR; DEBLURRING; MASKING;
D O I
10.1016/0042-6989(94)00308-9
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
For exposure durations longer than about 40 msec, a field of dots in sampled motion has been reported to appear less smeared than predicted from the visual persistence of static displays, This reduction of perceived smear has been attributed to a motion ''deblurring'' mechanism, However, it has been long recognized that an isolated target moving continuously in a dark field appears to be extensively smeared. To reconcile these apparently contradictory observations, we investigated the effect of dot density on the extent of perceived smear for a single moving dot acid for fields of dots with densities ranging from 0.75 to 7.5 dots/deg(2). Bright targets were presented in continuous motion against a photopically illuminated background field, The results reconcile previous conflicting observations by showing that the length of perceived smear decreases systematically with dot density for exposure durations longer than about 50 msec, In three additional experiments, we arranged the spatial configuration of the targets to evaluate whether motion deblurring results primarily from a motion compensation mechanism (such as integration within the spatiotemporally oriented receptive fields of putative motion mechanisms) or from inhibition exerted by spatiotemporally adjacent targets. The results show that the activation of motion mechanisms is not a sufficient condition for motion deblurring and that the reduction of perceived smear requires the presence of spatiotemporally adjacent targets, Taken together, these findings suggest that motion deblurring results primarily from masking exerted by spatiotemporally proximal targets.
引用
收藏
页码:2315 / 2328
页数:14
相关论文
共 52 条
[31]   A NEURAL NET MODEL FOR MASKING PHENOMENA [J].
LANDAHL, HD .
BULLETIN OF MATHEMATICAL BIOPHYSICS, 1967, 29 (02) :227-&
[32]  
LEFTON LA, 1973, PERCEPT PSYCHOPHYS, V13, P161
[33]  
LUBIMOV V, 1993, PERCEPTION S, V22, P77
[34]   METACONTRAST IN THE FOVEA [J].
LYON, JE ;
MATTESON, HH ;
MARX, MS .
VISION RESEARCH, 1981, 21 (02) :297-299
[35]  
MARTIN KE, 1993, ADV NEURAL INFORMATI, V5
[36]   THE SENSATIONS EXCITED BY A SINGLE MOMENTARY STIMULATION OF THE EYE [J].
McDougall, W. .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 1904, 1 :78-113
[37]   ANALOG MODELS OF MOTION PERCEPTION [J].
MORGAN, MJ ;
BARLOW, HB .
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF LONDON SERIES B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 1980, 290 (1038) :117-135
[38]   PSYCHOPHYSICAL ISOLATION OF MOVEMENT SENSITIVITY BY REMOVAL OF FAMILIAR POSITION CUES [J].
NAKAYAMA, K ;
TYLER, CW .
VISION RESEARCH, 1981, 21 (04) :427-433
[39]   A NEURAL THEORY OF RETINO-CORTICAL DYNAMICS [J].
OGMEN, H .
NEURAL NETWORKS, 1993, 6 (02) :245-273
[40]   EFFECTS OF MOTION ON BLUR DISCRIMINATION [J].
PAAKKONEN, AK ;
MORGAN, MJ .
JOURNAL OF THE OPTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA A-OPTICS IMAGE SCIENCE AND VISION, 1994, 11 (03) :992-1002