AbstractIn a series of experiments we compared orientation discrimination performance for Gabor stimuli in which the stimulus profile was either matched to the receptive field profile of single V1 simple cells (‘simple’), or in which the carrier and envelope orientations were different (‘tigertails’). In the first Experiment, using small, high spatial frequency, peripheral stimuli to minimise the number of detectors involved, we found that simple stimuli were more detectable than tigertails of the same contrast energy, and that orientation discrimination thresholds for simple stimuli were lower than for tigertails of equal detectability. In later experiments with larger stimuli we measured thresholds for detecting tilts of the envelope with...
AbstractWe compared the mechanisms responsible for orientation discrimination of stimuli defined by ...
AbstractWe have investigated orientation discrimination in visual noise using two types of high cont...
We compared the mechanisms responsible for orientation discrimination of stimuli defined by luminanc...
AbstractIn a series of experiments we compared orientation discrimination performance for Gabor stim...
AbstractThe visual system is sensitive to orientation information defined both by first-order (lumin...
AbstractOrientation detection and discrimination thresholds were measured for Gabor ‘envelopes’ form...
AbstractWe compared the number of spatial frequency and orientation mechanisms underlying first- ver...
AbstractStudies of second-order visual processing have primarily been concerned with understanding t...
AbstractIs there opponency between orientation-selective processes in pattern perception, analogous ...
AbstractThis paper examines the interaction between first- and second-order contours in the orientat...
Orientation detection and discrimination thresholds were measured for Gabor ‘envelopes’ ...
AbstractWe evaluated orientation discrimination thresholds using an external noise paradigm. Stimuli...
AbstractHumans can easily segregate texture regions based on differences in contrast, orientation, a...
AbstractThe twisted-cord illusion is a powerful demonstration of interaction between 1st-order (lumi...
AbstractMotivated by the recent physiological finding that a neuron’s receptive field can increase i...
AbstractWe compared the mechanisms responsible for orientation discrimination of stimuli defined by ...
AbstractWe have investigated orientation discrimination in visual noise using two types of high cont...
We compared the mechanisms responsible for orientation discrimination of stimuli defined by luminanc...
AbstractIn a series of experiments we compared orientation discrimination performance for Gabor stim...
AbstractThe visual system is sensitive to orientation information defined both by first-order (lumin...
AbstractOrientation detection and discrimination thresholds were measured for Gabor ‘envelopes’ form...
AbstractWe compared the number of spatial frequency and orientation mechanisms underlying first- ver...
AbstractStudies of second-order visual processing have primarily been concerned with understanding t...
AbstractIs there opponency between orientation-selective processes in pattern perception, analogous ...
AbstractThis paper examines the interaction between first- and second-order contours in the orientat...
Orientation detection and discrimination thresholds were measured for Gabor ‘envelopes’ ...
AbstractWe evaluated orientation discrimination thresholds using an external noise paradigm. Stimuli...
AbstractHumans can easily segregate texture regions based on differences in contrast, orientation, a...
AbstractThe twisted-cord illusion is a powerful demonstration of interaction between 1st-order (lumi...
AbstractMotivated by the recent physiological finding that a neuron’s receptive field can increase i...
AbstractWe compared the mechanisms responsible for orientation discrimination of stimuli defined by ...
AbstractWe have investigated orientation discrimination in visual noise using two types of high cont...
We compared the mechanisms responsible for orientation discrimination of stimuli defined by luminanc...