Author:
MONNIER PATRICK,SHEVELL STEVEN K.
Abstract
Intense scrutiny has been focused on whether chromatic stimuli
contribute to motion perception. The present study considers a related
but different question: how does motion affect chromatic detection?
Detection thresholds were measured for a disk that underwent a brief
(13.3 ms) chromatic change in the L/(L+M) chromatic direction. The
disk's presentation sequence and speed (0–16 deg/s) were
manipulated. In the coherent presentation sequence, the disk
moved smoothly along a circular path centered on the fixation point. In
the random presentation sequence, the disk appeared randomly
at positions along the circular path. In both types of sequences, the
disk underwent a brief chromatic change midway through the temporal
presentation sequence. Threshold was elevated in the coherent condition
compared to the random condition, and threshold decreased with an
increase in speed. The threshold elevation observed in the coherent
presentation sequence can be accounted for by temporal integration. The
decrease in threshold with an increase in speed can be accounted for by
spatial integration. The results, therefore, can be explained by
spatiotemporal integration, without invoking a neural mechanism
specialized for motion.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sensory Systems,Physiology
Cited by
5 articles.
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