Baker and Meese (2012) (B&M) provided an empirically driven criticism of the use of two-dimensional (2D) pixel noise in equivalent noise (EN) experiments. Their main objection was that in addition to injecting variability into the contrast detecting mechanisms, 2D noise also invokes gain control processes from a widely tuned contrast gain pool (e.g., Foley, 1994). B&M also developed a zero-dimensional (0D) noise paradigm in which all of the variance is concentrated in the mechanisms involved in the detection process. They showed that this form of noise conformed much more closely to expectations than did a 2D variant
<p>Data from pedestal and noise masking experiments to be published in PLoS One under the title:</p>...
White pixel noise is widely used to estimate the level of internal noise in a system by injecting ex...
Despite the ease with which we perceive, it is not clear how the distribution of light across the vi...
Baker and Meese (2012) (B&M) provided an empirically driven criticism of the use of two-dimensional ...
The transmission of weak signals through the visual system is limited by internal noise. Its level c...
Adding noise to a stimulus is useful to characterize visual processing. To avoid triggering a proces...
The standard psychophysical model of our early visual system consists of a linear filter stage, foll...
The internal noise present in a linear system can be quantified by the equivalent noise method. By m...
International audienceExternal noise paradigms are widely used to characterize sensitivity by compar...
The ability to distinguish one visual stimulus from another slightly different one depends on the va...
AbstractIt has been argued that the human visual system is optimized for identification of broadband...
AbstractIt has been difficult to isolate the factors that limit contrast discrimination, one of the ...
Internal noise is a fundamental limiting property on visual processing. Internal noise has previousl...
Noise has been widely used to investigate the processing properties of various visual functions (e.g...
AbstractVisual perception is limited by both the strength of the neural signals, and by the noise in...
<p>Data from pedestal and noise masking experiments to be published in PLoS One under the title:</p>...
White pixel noise is widely used to estimate the level of internal noise in a system by injecting ex...
Despite the ease with which we perceive, it is not clear how the distribution of light across the vi...
Baker and Meese (2012) (B&M) provided an empirically driven criticism of the use of two-dimensional ...
The transmission of weak signals through the visual system is limited by internal noise. Its level c...
Adding noise to a stimulus is useful to characterize visual processing. To avoid triggering a proces...
The standard psychophysical model of our early visual system consists of a linear filter stage, foll...
The internal noise present in a linear system can be quantified by the equivalent noise method. By m...
International audienceExternal noise paradigms are widely used to characterize sensitivity by compar...
The ability to distinguish one visual stimulus from another slightly different one depends on the va...
AbstractIt has been argued that the human visual system is optimized for identification of broadband...
AbstractIt has been difficult to isolate the factors that limit contrast discrimination, one of the ...
Internal noise is a fundamental limiting property on visual processing. Internal noise has previousl...
Noise has been widely used to investigate the processing properties of various visual functions (e.g...
AbstractVisual perception is limited by both the strength of the neural signals, and by the noise in...
<p>Data from pedestal and noise masking experiments to be published in PLoS One under the title:</p>...
White pixel noise is widely used to estimate the level of internal noise in a system by injecting ex...
Despite the ease with which we perceive, it is not clear how the distribution of light across the vi...