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Brightness masking is modulated by disparity structure.


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Authors

Pelekanos, Vassilis 
Ban, Hiroshi 
Welchman, Andrew E 

Abstract

The luminance contrast at the borders of a surface strongly influences surface's apparent brightness, as demonstrated by a number of classic visual illusions. Such phenomena are compatible with a propagation mechanism believed to spread contrast information from borders to the interior. This process is disrupted by masking, where the perceived brightness of a target is reduced by the brief presentation of a mask (Paradiso & Nakayama, 1991), but the exact visual stage that this happens remains unclear. In the present study, we examined whether brightness masking occurs at a monocular-, or a binocular-level of the visual hierarchy. We used backward masking, whereby a briefly presented target stimulus is disrupted by a mask coming soon afterwards, to show that brightness masking is affected by binocular stages of the visual processing. We manipulated the 3-D configurations (slant direction) of the target and mask and measured the differential disruption that masking causes on brightness estimation. We found that the masking effect was weaker when stimuli had a different slant. We suggest that brightness masking is partly mediated by mid-level neuronal mechanisms, at a stage where binocular disparity edge structure has been extracted.

Description

Keywords

Binocular depth perception, Brightness estimation, Filling-in, Visual masking, Adult, Analysis of Variance, Contrast Sensitivity, Female, Form Perception, Humans, Lighting, Male, Optical Illusions, Perceptual Masking, Photic Stimulation, Psychophysics, Sensory Thresholds, Vision Disparity, Vision, Binocular, Vision, Monocular, Young Adult

Journal Title

Vision Res

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0042-6989
1878-5646

Volume Title

110

Publisher

Elsevier BV
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (095183/Z/10/Z)
This project was supported by fellowships to H.B. from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, JSPS KAKENHI (26870911) and A.E.W. from the Wellcome Trust (095183/Z/10/Z).