Cross-orientation masking is speed invariant between ocular pathways but speed dependent within them
Meese, Timothy S. and Baker, Daniel H. (2009) Cross-orientation masking is speed invariant between ocular pathways but speed dependent within them. Journal of Vision, 9 (5). 2, 1-15. ISSN 1534-7362
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Official URL: http://journalofvision.org/9/5/2/
Abstract
In human (D. H. Baker, T. S. Meese, & R. J. Summers, 2007b) and in cat (B. Li, M. R. Peterson, J. K. Thompson, T. Duong, & R. D. Freeman, 2005; F. Sengpiel & V. Vorobyov, 2005) there are at least two routes to cross-orientation suppression (XOS): a broadband, non-adaptable, monocular (within-eye) pathway and a more narrowband, adaptable interocular (between the eyes) pathway. We further characterized these two routes psychophysically by measuring the weight of suppression across spatio-temporal frequency for cross-oriented pairs of superimposed flickering Gabor patches. Masking functions were normalized to unmasked detection thresholds and fitted by a two-stage model of contrast gain control (T. S. Meese, M. A. Georgeson, & D. H. Baker, 2006) that was developed to accommodate XOS. The weight of monocular suppression was a power function of the scalar quantity ‘speed’ (temporal-frequency/spatial-frequency). This weight can be expressed as the ratio of non-oriented magno- and parvo-like mechanisms, permitting a fast-acting, early locus, as befits the urgency for action associated with high retinal speeds. In contrast, dichoptic-masking functions superimposed. Overall, this (i) provides further evidence for dissociation between the two forms of XOS in humans, and (ii) indicates that the monocular and interocular varieties of XOS are space/time scale-dependent and scale-invariant, respectively. This suggests an image-processing role for interocular XOS that is tailored to natural image statistics—very different from that of the scale-dependent (speed-dependent) monocular variety.
| Item Type: | Article |
|---|---|
| Uncontrolled Keywords: | human vision, psychophysics, contrast gain control, interocular masking, binocular rivalry |
| Subjects: | Biological Sciences > Psychology > Experimental Psychology Subjects allied to Medicine > Anatomy > Neuroscience |
| Divisions: | Life and Health Sciences |
| ID Code: | 1433 |
| Deposited By: | Dr. Daniel H. Baker |
| Deposited On: | 12 Oct 2009 10:16 |
| Last Modified: | 06 Jan 2010 13:33 |
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