The psychophysics of spatial sampling
Bernice E. Rogowitz
Proceedings of SPIE 1989
A metacontrast masking paradigm is presented in which the detectability of a sine-wave target is measured in the presence of a spatially-flanking sine-wave mask. The onset of the mask either precedes (forward masking) or follows (backward masking) the onset of the target. Target detectability is measured as a function of stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA) for stimuli varying in spatial frequency and contrast. For low spatial-frequency targets, target detectability varies as a U-shaped function of SOA both in forward and backward masking. For high spatial frequency targets, U-shaped masking is observed only in backward masking. The magnitude of the masking effect at each SOA of maximal masking (SOAmax) depends on the spatial-frequency similarity of target and mask. SOAmax does not vary with contrast, but does vary with spatial frequency. These data are considered within the context of a model positing inhibitory interactions between the responses of fast- and slow-responding spatial-frequency selective channels, where the latency to channel response increases with spatial frequency. © 1983.
Bernice E. Rogowitz
Proceedings of SPIE 1989
Junqing Chen, Thrasyvoulos N. Pappas, et al.
ICIP 2004
Bernice E. Rogowitz
Behaviour and Information Technology
Bernice E. Rogowitz, Mercan Topkara, et al.
SPIE Optics + Photonics 2015 SF