The chromatic selectivity of visual crowding

Precortical vision is mediated by three opponent mechanisms that combine receptoral outputs to form a luminance channel (L + M) and two chromatic channels, red-green (L/M) and blue-yellow (S/L + M). Here we ask the extent to which these basic color opponent mechanisms interact in the phenomenon of c...

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Main Authors: Kennedy, Graeme J., Whitaker, David J.
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10454/6049
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spelling ndltd-BRADFORD-oai-bradscholars.brad.ac.uk-10454-60492019-08-31T03:03:10Z The chromatic selectivity of visual crowding Kennedy, Graeme J. Whitaker, David J. Color perception Contrast sensitivity Humans Orientation Photic stimulation Sensory thresholds Space perception Physiology REF 2014 Precortical vision is mediated by three opponent mechanisms that combine receptoral outputs to form a luminance channel (L + M) and two chromatic channels, red-green (L/M) and blue-yellow (S/L + M). Here we ask the extent to which these basic color opponent mechanisms interact in the phenomenon of crowding, where nearby targets interfere with the processing of a central test target. The task was to identify the orientation of a Gabor patch while an annular plaid surrounded the patch. The radius of the annulus was varied in order to produce different separations of the test and flanker. The chromatic content of the Gabor and the annulus could be varied independently along the (L + M), (L/M), and (S/L + M) cardinal axes. For all targets, when the target and flanker shared the same chromaticity, performance decreased with decreasing separation of the target and annulus, i.e., a typical crowding effect was seen. When the test and flanker isolated different chromatic mechanisms, very little crowding was observed, even at the minimum separation of test target and annulus. In addition to this, intermediate chromaticities were found to produce intermediate levels of crowding. Finally, crowding effects using "half-wave rectified" stimuli suggest a locus for crowding effects beyond the level of color opponent mechanisms. 2014-04-28T10:50:42Z 2014-04-28T10:50:42Z 2010 Article Kennedy, G. J., Whitaker, D. (2010) The chromatic selectivity of visual crowding. Journal of Vision, 10 (6), 15. http://hdl.handle.net/10454/6049 http://dx.doi.org/10.1167/10.6.15
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Color perception
Contrast sensitivity
Humans
Orientation
Photic stimulation
Sensory thresholds
Space perception
Physiology
REF 2014
spellingShingle Color perception
Contrast sensitivity
Humans
Orientation
Photic stimulation
Sensory thresholds
Space perception
Physiology
REF 2014
Kennedy, Graeme J.
Whitaker, David J.
The chromatic selectivity of visual crowding
description Precortical vision is mediated by three opponent mechanisms that combine receptoral outputs to form a luminance channel (L + M) and two chromatic channels, red-green (L/M) and blue-yellow (S/L + M). Here we ask the extent to which these basic color opponent mechanisms interact in the phenomenon of crowding, where nearby targets interfere with the processing of a central test target. The task was to identify the orientation of a Gabor patch while an annular plaid surrounded the patch. The radius of the annulus was varied in order to produce different separations of the test and flanker. The chromatic content of the Gabor and the annulus could be varied independently along the (L + M), (L/M), and (S/L + M) cardinal axes. For all targets, when the target and flanker shared the same chromaticity, performance decreased with decreasing separation of the target and annulus, i.e., a typical crowding effect was seen. When the test and flanker isolated different chromatic mechanisms, very little crowding was observed, even at the minimum separation of test target and annulus. In addition to this, intermediate chromaticities were found to produce intermediate levels of crowding. Finally, crowding effects using "half-wave rectified" stimuli suggest a locus for crowding effects beyond the level of color opponent mechanisms.
author Kennedy, Graeme J.
Whitaker, David J.
author_facet Kennedy, Graeme J.
Whitaker, David J.
author_sort Kennedy, Graeme J.
title The chromatic selectivity of visual crowding
title_short The chromatic selectivity of visual crowding
title_full The chromatic selectivity of visual crowding
title_fullStr The chromatic selectivity of visual crowding
title_full_unstemmed The chromatic selectivity of visual crowding
title_sort chromatic selectivity of visual crowding
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10454/6049
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