Effect of luminance noise on the object frequencies mediating letter identification

Purpose: To determine if the same object frequency information mediates letter contrast threshold in the presence and absence of additive luminance noise (i.e. noise-invariant processing) for letters of different size. Methods: Contrast thresholds for Sloan letters ranging in size from 0.9 to 1.8 lo...

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Main Authors: Cierra Michelle Hall, Shu eWang, Reema eBhagat, J. Jason eMcAnany
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00663/full
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spelling doaj-96c9bf7ca92d47eabb6ee59f31c9d5102020-11-25T00:59:00ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782014-07-01510.3389/fpsyg.2014.0066376518Effect of luminance noise on the object frequencies mediating letter identificationCierra Michelle Hall0Cierra Michelle Hall1Shu eWang2Shu eWang3Reema eBhagat4J. Jason eMcAnany5J. Jason eMcAnany6J. Jason eMcAnany7University of Illinois at ChicagoUniversity of Illinois at ChicagoUniversity of Illinois at ChicagoUniversity of Illinois at ChicagoUniversity of Illinois at ChicagoUniversity of Illinois at ChicagoUniversity of Illinois at ChicagoUniversity of Illinois at ChicagoPurpose: To determine if the same object frequency information mediates letter contrast threshold in the presence and absence of additive luminance noise (i.e. noise-invariant processing) for letters of different size. Methods: Contrast thresholds for Sloan letters ranging in size from 0.9 to 1.8 log MAR were obtained from three visually normal observers under three paradigms: 1) high- and low-pass Gaussian filtered letters were presented against a uniform adapting field; 2) high- and low-pass Gaussian filtered letters were presented in additive white luminance noise; and 3) unfiltered letters were presented in high- and low-pass Gaussian filtered luminance noise. A range of high- and low-pass filter cutoffs were used to limit selectively the object frequency content of the letters (paradigms 1 and 2) or noise (paradigm 3). The object frequencies mediating letter identification under each paradigm were derived from plots of log contrast threshold vs. log filter cutoff frequency. Results: The object frequency band mediating letter identification systematically shifted to higher frequencies with increasing log MAR letter size under all three paradigms. However, the relationship between object frequency and letter size depended on the paradigm under which the measurements were obtained. The largest difference in object frequency among the paradigms was observed at 1.8 log MAR, where the addition of white noise nearly doubled the center frequency of the band of object frequencies mediating letter identification, compared to measurements made in the absence of noise. Conclusions: Noise can affect the object frequency band mediating letter contrast threshold, particularly for large letters, an effect that is likely due to strong masking of the low frequency letter components by low frequency noise checks. This finding indicates that noise-invariant processing cannot necessarily be assumed for large letters presented in white noise.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00663/fullContrast SensitivityVisual noiseletter identificationoptotypeobject spatial frequencyretinal spatial frequency
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cierra Michelle Hall
Cierra Michelle Hall
Shu eWang
Shu eWang
Reema eBhagat
J. Jason eMcAnany
J. Jason eMcAnany
J. Jason eMcAnany
spellingShingle Cierra Michelle Hall
Cierra Michelle Hall
Shu eWang
Shu eWang
Reema eBhagat
J. Jason eMcAnany
J. Jason eMcAnany
J. Jason eMcAnany
Effect of luminance noise on the object frequencies mediating letter identification
Frontiers in Psychology
Contrast Sensitivity
Visual noise
letter identification
optotype
object spatial frequency
retinal spatial frequency
author_facet Cierra Michelle Hall
Cierra Michelle Hall
Shu eWang
Shu eWang
Reema eBhagat
J. Jason eMcAnany
J. Jason eMcAnany
J. Jason eMcAnany
author_sort Cierra Michelle Hall
title Effect of luminance noise on the object frequencies mediating letter identification
title_short Effect of luminance noise on the object frequencies mediating letter identification
title_full Effect of luminance noise on the object frequencies mediating letter identification
title_fullStr Effect of luminance noise on the object frequencies mediating letter identification
title_full_unstemmed Effect of luminance noise on the object frequencies mediating letter identification
title_sort effect of luminance noise on the object frequencies mediating letter identification
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2014-07-01
description Purpose: To determine if the same object frequency information mediates letter contrast threshold in the presence and absence of additive luminance noise (i.e. noise-invariant processing) for letters of different size. Methods: Contrast thresholds for Sloan letters ranging in size from 0.9 to 1.8 log MAR were obtained from three visually normal observers under three paradigms: 1) high- and low-pass Gaussian filtered letters were presented against a uniform adapting field; 2) high- and low-pass Gaussian filtered letters were presented in additive white luminance noise; and 3) unfiltered letters were presented in high- and low-pass Gaussian filtered luminance noise. A range of high- and low-pass filter cutoffs were used to limit selectively the object frequency content of the letters (paradigms 1 and 2) or noise (paradigm 3). The object frequencies mediating letter identification under each paradigm were derived from plots of log contrast threshold vs. log filter cutoff frequency. Results: The object frequency band mediating letter identification systematically shifted to higher frequencies with increasing log MAR letter size under all three paradigms. However, the relationship between object frequency and letter size depended on the paradigm under which the measurements were obtained. The largest difference in object frequency among the paradigms was observed at 1.8 log MAR, where the addition of white noise nearly doubled the center frequency of the band of object frequencies mediating letter identification, compared to measurements made in the absence of noise. Conclusions: Noise can affect the object frequency band mediating letter contrast threshold, particularly for large letters, an effect that is likely due to strong masking of the low frequency letter components by low frequency noise checks. This finding indicates that noise-invariant processing cannot necessarily be assumed for large letters presented in white noise.
topic Contrast Sensitivity
Visual noise
letter identification
optotype
object spatial frequency
retinal spatial frequency
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00663/full
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