Recovery of a crowded object by masking the flankers: Determining the locus of feature integration

被引:43
作者
Chakravarthi, Ramakrishna [1 ]
Cavanagh, Patrick [2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] NYU, New York, NY 10003 USA
[2] Univ Paris 05, Lab Psychol Percept, Paris, France
[3] Harvard Univ, Dept Psychol, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA
关键词
Object recognition; feature integration; crowding; masking; target recovery; extrastriate cortex; SPATIAL INTERACTION; VISUAL MASKING; METACONTRAST; NEUROPHYSIOLOGY; SUBSTITUTION; ATTENTION; MOTION; ONSET; MODEL;
D O I
10.1167/9.10.4
中图分类号
R77 [眼科学];
学科分类号
100212 ;
摘要
Object recognition is a central function of the visual system. As a first step, the features of an object are registered; these independently encoded features are then bound together to form a single representation. Here we investigate the locus of this "feature integration" by examining crowding, a striking breakdown of this process. Crowding, an inability to identify a peripheral target surrounded by flankers, results from "excessive integration" of target and flanker features. We presented a standard crowding display with a target C flanked by four flanker C's in the periphery. We then masked only the flankers (but not the target) with one of three kinds of masks-noise, metacontrast, and object substitution-each of which interferes at progressively higher levels of visual processing. With noise and metacontrast masks (low-level masking), the crowded target was recovered, whereas with object substitution masks (high-level masking), it was not. This places a clear upper bound on the locus of interference in crowding suggesting that crowding is not a low-level phenomenon. We conclude that feature integration, which underlies crowding, occurs prior to the locus of object substitution masking. Further, our results indicate that the integrity of the flankers, but not their identification, is crucial for crowding to occur.
引用
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 36 条
[1]   METACONTRAST [J].
ALPERN, M .
JOURNAL OF THE OPTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 1953, 43 (08) :648-657
[2]   VISUAL MASKING - A UNIFIED APPROACH [J].
ANBAR, S ;
ANBAR, D .
PERCEPTION, 1982, 11 (04) :427-439
[3]   MOTION AND METACONTRAST WITH SIMULTANEOUS ONSET OF STIMULI [J].
BISCHOF, WF ;
DILOLLO, V .
JOURNAL OF THE OPTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA A-OPTICS IMAGE SCIENCE AND VISION, 1995, 12 (08) :1623-1636
[4]   Strength of early visual adaptation depends on visual awareness [J].
Blake, R ;
Tadin, D ;
Sobel, KV ;
Raissian, TA ;
Chong, SC .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2006, 103 (12) :4783-4788
[5]   INTERACTION EFFECTS IN PARAFOVEAL LETTER RECOGNITION [J].
BOUMA, H .
NATURE, 1970, 226 (5241) :177-&
[6]   IMPLICATIONS OF SUSTAINED AND TRANSIENT CHANNELS FOR THEORIES OF VISUAL-PATTERN MASKING, SACCADIC SUPPRESSION, AND INFORMATION-PROCESSING [J].
BREITMEYER, BG ;
GANZ, L .
PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW, 1976, 83 (01) :1-36
[7]   A model of visual backward masking [J].
Bugmann, G ;
Taylor, JG .
BIOSYSTEMS, 2005, 79 (1-3) :151-158
[8]   SUMMATION OF TARGET AND MASK METACONTRAST STIMULI [J].
BURR, DC .
PERCEPTION, 1984, 13 (02) :183-192
[9]   No representation without awareness in the lateral occipital cortex [J].
Carlson, Thomas A. ;
Rauschenberger, Robert ;
Verstraten, Frans A. J. .
PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2007, 18 (04) :298-302
[10]   Spatial-frequency and contrast properties of crowding [J].
Chung, STL ;
Levi, DM ;
Legge, GE .
VISION RESEARCH, 2001, 41 (14) :1833-1850