The ability of the visual system to detect stimuli that vary along dimensions other than luminance or color - "second-order" stimuli - has been of considerable interest in recent years. An important unresolved issue is whether different types of second-order stimuli are detected by a single, all purpose, mechanism, or by mechanisms that are specific to stimulus type. Using a conventional psychophysical paradigm, we show that for a class of second-order stimuli - textures sinusoidally modulated in orientation (OM), spatial frequency (FM), and contrast (CM) - the human visual system employs mechanisms that are selective to stimulus type. Whereas the addition of a subthreshold mask to a test pattern of the same stimulus type was found to facil...
AbstractRecent investigations of texture and motion perception suggest two early filtering stages: a...
AbstractHuman texture vision has been modeled as a filter–rectify–filter (FRF) process, in which ‘2n...
AbstractHuman vision can detect spatiotemporal information conveyed by first-order modulations of lu...
The ability of the visual system to detect stimuli that vary along dimensions other than luminance o...
The ability of the visual system to detect stimuli that vary along dimensions other than luminance o...
AbstractThe processing of texture patterns has been characterized by a model that first filters the ...
AbstractSubstantial evidence has accumulated for the notion that modulations of second-order propert...
AbstractSubstantial evidence has accumulated for the notion that modulations of second-order propert...
AbstractRecent investigations of texture and motion perception suggest two early filtering stages: a...
AbstractIntuitively it may seem likely that orientation-modulated (OM) and frequency-modulated (FM) ...
AbstractHumans can easily segregate texture regions based on differences in contrast, orientation, a...
AbstractHuman vision can detect spatiotemporal information conveyed by first-order modulations of lu...
AbstractNatural scenes contain localized variations in both first-order (luminance) and second-order...
AbstractWe examine metacontrast masking with texture-defined second-order stimuli. Our results revea...
AbstractThe processing of texture patterns has been characterized by a model that first filters the ...
AbstractRecent investigations of texture and motion perception suggest two early filtering stages: a...
AbstractHuman texture vision has been modeled as a filter–rectify–filter (FRF) process, in which ‘2n...
AbstractHuman vision can detect spatiotemporal information conveyed by first-order modulations of lu...
The ability of the visual system to detect stimuli that vary along dimensions other than luminance o...
The ability of the visual system to detect stimuli that vary along dimensions other than luminance o...
AbstractThe processing of texture patterns has been characterized by a model that first filters the ...
AbstractSubstantial evidence has accumulated for the notion that modulations of second-order propert...
AbstractSubstantial evidence has accumulated for the notion that modulations of second-order propert...
AbstractRecent investigations of texture and motion perception suggest two early filtering stages: a...
AbstractIntuitively it may seem likely that orientation-modulated (OM) and frequency-modulated (FM) ...
AbstractHumans can easily segregate texture regions based on differences in contrast, orientation, a...
AbstractHuman vision can detect spatiotemporal information conveyed by first-order modulations of lu...
AbstractNatural scenes contain localized variations in both first-order (luminance) and second-order...
AbstractWe examine metacontrast masking with texture-defined second-order stimuli. Our results revea...
AbstractThe processing of texture patterns has been characterized by a model that first filters the ...
AbstractRecent investigations of texture and motion perception suggest two early filtering stages: a...
AbstractHuman texture vision has been modeled as a filter–rectify–filter (FRF) process, in which ‘2n...
AbstractHuman vision can detect spatiotemporal information conveyed by first-order modulations of lu...