The influence of spatial and temporal noise on the detection of first-order and second-order orientation and motion direction

被引:24
作者
Ledgeway, T [1 ]
Hutchinson, CV [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Nottingham, Sch Psychol, Nottingham NG7 2RD, England
关键词
first-order motion; second-order motion; orientation; direction; visual noise;
D O I
10.1016/j.visres.2005.02.005
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Thresholds for identifying the direction of second-order motion (contrast-modulated dynamic noise) are consistently higher than those for identifying spatial orientation, unlike first-order gratings for which the two thresholds are typically the same. Two explanations of this phenomenon have been proposed: either first-order and second-order patterns are encoded by separate mechanisms with different properties, or dynamic noise selectively impairs ("masks") sensitivity to second-order motion direction but not orientation. The former predicts the two thresholds should remain distinct for second-order patterns, irrespective of the temporal structure (static vs. dynamic) of the noise carrier. The latter predicts direction thresholds should be higher than orientation thresholds, for both second-order and first-order motion patterns, when dynamic (but not static) noise is present. To resolve this issue we measured direction and orientation thresholds for first-order (luminance) and second-order (contrast or polarity) modulations of static or dynamic noise. Results were decisive: The two thresholds were invariably the same for first-order stimuli but markedly different (direction thresholds similar to 50% higher) for second-order stimuli, regardless of the temporal properties (static or dynamic) and the overall contrast of the noise, or the drift temporal frequency of the envelope. This suggests that first-order and second-order motion are encoded separately and that the mechanisms encoding second-order stimuli cannot determine direction at the absolute threshold for spatial form. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:2081 / 2094
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] No interaction of first- and second-order signals in the extraction of global-motion and optic-flow
    Cassanello, Carlos R.
    Edwards, Mark
    Badcock, David R.
    Nishida, Shin'ya
    VISION RESEARCH, 2011, 51 (03) : 352 - 361
  • [42] Comparison of sensitivity to first- and second-order local motion in 5-year-olds and adults
    Ellemberg, D
    Lewis, TL
    Meghji, KS
    Maurer, D
    Guillemot, JP
    Lepore, F
    SPATIAL VISION, 2003, 16 (05): : 419 - 428
  • [43] The efficiency of second order orientation coherence detection
    Baldwin, Alex S.
    Husk, Jesse S.
    Edwards, Lauren
    Hess, Robert F.
    VISION RESEARCH, 2015, 109 : 45 - 51
  • [44] Second-order motion discrimination by feature-tracking
    Derrington, AM
    Ukkonen, OI
    VISION RESEARCH, 1999, 39 (08) : 1465 - 1475
  • [45] Independence in the processing of first- and second-order motion signals at the local-motion-pooling level
    Edwards, Mark
    Metcalf, Olivia
    VISION RESEARCH, 2010, 50 (03) : 261 - 270
  • [46] Separate motion-detecting mechanisms for first- and second-order patterns revealed by rapid forms of visual motion priming and motion aftereffect
    Pavan, Andrea
    Campana, Gianluca
    Guerreschi, Michele
    Manassi, Mauro
    Casco, Clara
    JOURNAL OF VISION, 2009, 9 (11):
  • [47] First- and second-order motion perception in Gabor micropattern stimuli: psychophysics and computational modelling
    Clifford, CWG
    Freedman, JN
    Vaina, LM
    COGNITIVE BRAIN RESEARCH, 1998, 6 (04): : 263 - 271
  • [48] The selective impairment of the perception of first-order motion by unilateral cortical brain damage
    Vaina, LM
    Makris, N
    Kennedy, D
    Cowey, A
    VISUAL NEUROSCIENCE, 1998, 15 (02) : 333 - 348
  • [49] Sensitivity to second-order motion in 10-month-olds
    Kato, Masaharu
    de Wit, Tessa C. J.
    Stasiewicz, Dorota
    von Hofsten, Claes
    VISION RESEARCH, 2008, 48 (10) : 1187 - 1195
  • [50] Area summation of first- and second-order modulations of luminance
    Summers, Robert J.
    Baker, Daniel H.
    Meese, Tim S.
    JOURNAL OF VISION, 2015, 15 (01): : 1 - 13