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Temporal and Spatial Visual Masking I Masking by Impulse Flashes
109
Citations
36
References
1965
Year
Spatial Visual MaskingEarly VisionCognitive ScienceImage AnalysisEngineeringPhysiological OpticEye TrackingVision ResearchNeuroscienceMasking PeakMasking Stimulus MVisual ProcessingLong Masking FlashPsychophysicsSocial SciencesComputer VisionVisual Function
Masking is defined as the change in threshold energy eT*(τ) of a test stimulus T induced by a masking stimulus M of energy eM as a function of the relative time τ of occurrence. Masking is maximum when T and M occur simultaneously. A slight decrease in threshold for tests preceding the masking impulse by about 0.1 sec was explained as an alteration in appearance of the subsequent masking flash by a “subthreshold” test flash. Impulse-contrast threshold eT*/eM was investigated for masking impulses M of seven different energies superimposed on five backgrounds B. The increases in test threshold caused by M and by B were found to be independent and a modified Weber’s law (adjusted contrast threshold Cδ*≈0.1) held approximately. This conclusion was supported in a supplementary investigation of Cδ* using a category-rating-scale method.Impulse masking results were applied to predicting the masking peak at the onset of a long flash by treating the first 60 msec as an impulse. The lowering of thresholds of tests delayed in a long masking flash implied other detection mechanisms (e.g., temporal resolution). Theoretical predictions accounted for 94% and 97% of the variance in two relevant experiments, correctly predicting the effect of masking-flash duration and of background intensity.In both steady and intermittent light, masking is attributed primarily to fast processes (time constant ≪1 sec) which presumably have a neural rather than a photochemical basis.
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