Vision Sciences Society Third Annual Meeting, Sarasota, Florida. May 2003

Multiplicative and Suppressive Effect of Sustained and Transient Edge Adaptation in
Peripheral Target Detection.
1 Computation and Neural Systems Program, California institute of Technology,
Pasadena, CA 91125, USA
2 NTT Communication Science laboratories, Atsugi, Kanagawa, 243 Japan
Abstract
Filling-in can be induced by high-contrast edge adaptation (Shimojo &
Kamitani VSS’01), or after prolonged adaptation to a peripheral low-contrast object
(Troxler 1904). Adaptation to sustained low-contrast vs. adaptation to transient high-contrast
suggests synergy between contrast and edge adaptation, but the possible
interactions are not well understood. We observed that presenting a low-contrast edge
for 5-10 seconds and then flashing a high-contrast edge over it could elicit the
perceptual disappearance of a subsequent low-contrast edge at the same location.
Neither adaptation to the low-contrast edge nor flashing the high-contrast edge alone
had any significant effect. We investigated this effect using Gabor signals (2 cpd, 5 deg
eccent., sd=1, mean lum. 50cd/m2, background 50cd/m2). Target (contrast=4%)
followed either a) a sustained (8 sec) low (4%) contrast stationary or drifting Gabor
signal (adaptation only), b) a brief (20ms) high (~100%) contrast Gabor signal (flash
only), or c) adaptation followed by flash (combined condition). A random-dot mask
followed the target after 1 second. The task was to identify whether the target was
present or not. Subjects (n=5) failed in less than 3% of the trials in adaptation only or
flash only conditions, but more than 30% in the combined condition (p<.0001). For
combined condition trials, failure of detection was more pronounced after adaptation
to a drifting Gabor than a stationary one (p<.05). There was no significant difference
between same or opposite contrast polarity (phase insensitivity). In other experiments
we found: a) suppression is selective for orientation, and b) disappearance could be
transferred to other locations. Results suggest 1) Contrast gain adjustment to transient
change is processed separately from adaptation to sustained stimuli; 2) the two
mechanisms interact non-linearly. Findings are compatible with non-local orientation
selective cortical mechanisms presumably at the level of V1 to V4.
Poster
( HTML,
PDF 1514KB).
Demo
Basic Effect
Fixate at the cross-hair for about 8 seconds.
Contrast polarity does not matter
http://www.klab.caltech.edu/~farshadm/vss2003/