Dichoptic colour-saturation masking is unmasked by binocular luminance contrast

被引:10
作者
Kingdom, Frederick A. A. [1 ]
Wang, Danni [1 ]
机构
[1] Montreal Gen Hosp, Dept Ophthalmol, McGill Vis Res, Montreal, PQ H3G 1A4, Canada
关键词
Dichoptic masking; Colour vision; Binocular vision; Saturation masking; Object commonality hypothesis; SUPPRESSION; VISION; FUSION;
D O I
10.1016/j.visres.2015.08.016
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
We demonstrate a new type of interaction between suprathreshold colour (chromatic) and luminance contrast in the context of binocular, specifically dichoptic vision. A highly saturated isoluminant violet 'mask' disk in one eye greatly elevates detection thresholds for an isoluminant violet 'test' disk in the other eye, an example of dichoptic colour-saturation masking. However when binocular luminance contrast (i.e. luminance contrast matched in the two eyes) is added to the disks, the masking is dramatically reduced. Adding binocular luminance contrast to the test disk on its own, or to the mask and test disks presented together in both eyes had comparatively little effect on test thresholds. The likely explanation for the dichoptic unmasking effect is that the binocular luminance contrast reduced the interocular suppression between chromatic mask and test, in keeping with other recent findings from measurements of the appearance of dichoptic saturation mixtures (Kingdom & Libenson, 2015). We suggest that binocularly matched luminance contrast promotes the interpretation that the dichoptic colour saturations, even though unmatched, nevertheless originate from a single object. Under these conditions the visual system tends to blend the mask and test saturations rather than have them compete, resulting in reduced dichoptic masking. We term this idea the "object commonality" hypothesis. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:45 / 52
页数:8
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