AbstractContrast detection performance is known to be better for single component sinusoidal gratings than for sums of gratings at different orientations. A recent study Rovamo et al. (1994) (Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science, 35, 2611–2619) showed that spatial integration is less effective for multiple orientation component than for single component gratings. This suggests an explanation that the size of a spatial integration window depends on the orientation contents of the stimulus. To test this hypothesis we designed a computational detection model and tested it against new experimental data. The model generates a cross-correlation template, the extent of which is limited both in the spatial and spatial frequency domain. Th...
A major determinant of human texture segregation and discrimination is the orientational content of ...
Above threshold, two superimposed sinusoidal gratings of the same spatial frequency (eg 1 cycle deg ...
The ability of human participants to integrate fragmented stimulus elements into perceived coherent ...
AbstractContrast detection performance is known to be better for single component sinusoidal grating...
AbstractWe studied spatial integration at low contrasts by testing the detection thresholds of multi...
AbstractWe describe evidence consistent with the proposal that the visual system contains a parallel...
This thesis studied the effect of (i) the number of grating components and (ii) parameter randomisat...
We studied spatial integration at low contrasts by testing the detection thresholds of multi-Gabor e...
AbstractModels of spatial vision usually assume a ‘front-end’ of spatial-frequency and orientation s...
The standard model of early vision claims that orientation and spatial frequency are encoded with mu...
AbstractWe evaluated orientation discrimination thresholds using an external noise paradigm. Stimuli...
Ei indicates the eccentricity where stimulus size must double to maintain performance equivalent to ...
The visual system pools information from local samples to calculate textural properties. We used a n...
Interactions between size and orientation-specific mechanisms in the human visual system were invest...
AbstractThe visibility of gratings improves with increasing stimulus area. This effect is usually in...
A major determinant of human texture segregation and discrimination is the orientational content of ...
Above threshold, two superimposed sinusoidal gratings of the same spatial frequency (eg 1 cycle deg ...
The ability of human participants to integrate fragmented stimulus elements into perceived coherent ...
AbstractContrast detection performance is known to be better for single component sinusoidal grating...
AbstractWe studied spatial integration at low contrasts by testing the detection thresholds of multi...
AbstractWe describe evidence consistent with the proposal that the visual system contains a parallel...
This thesis studied the effect of (i) the number of grating components and (ii) parameter randomisat...
We studied spatial integration at low contrasts by testing the detection thresholds of multi-Gabor e...
AbstractModels of spatial vision usually assume a ‘front-end’ of spatial-frequency and orientation s...
The standard model of early vision claims that orientation and spatial frequency are encoded with mu...
AbstractWe evaluated orientation discrimination thresholds using an external noise paradigm. Stimuli...
Ei indicates the eccentricity where stimulus size must double to maintain performance equivalent to ...
The visual system pools information from local samples to calculate textural properties. We used a n...
Interactions between size and orientation-specific mechanisms in the human visual system were invest...
AbstractThe visibility of gratings improves with increasing stimulus area. This effect is usually in...
A major determinant of human texture segregation and discrimination is the orientational content of ...
Above threshold, two superimposed sinusoidal gratings of the same spatial frequency (eg 1 cycle deg ...
The ability of human participants to integrate fragmented stimulus elements into perceived coherent ...