Publication | Open Access
Crowding and surround suppression: Not to be confused
119
Citations
30
References
2007
Year
EngineeringNoise ControlCommunicationAttentionSurround SuppressionSocial SciencesPsychologyEarly VisionImage AnalysisEarly Crowding StudiesPattern RecognitionNoisePerception SystemCognitive ScienceMachine VisionPopular Crowding ParadigmPublic DisplayVision ResearchVisual ProcessingSignal ProcessingComputer VisionVisual FunctionEye TrackingVisibility
Crowding and surround suppression share many similarities, which suggests the possibility of a common mechanism. Despite decades of research, there has been little effort to compare the two phenomena in a consistent fashion. A recent study by D. M. Levi, S. Hariharan, and S. A. Klein (2002) argues that the two are unrelated because crowding effects can be much stronger than suppression effects. Here we report experiments in which the same Gabor target was used both for orientation identification (crowding) and contrast detection (suppression) tasks. In agreement with early crowding studies (e.g., H. Bouma, 1973) we found, that an outward mask is much more effective than an inward mask for the orientation identification task. Notably, no such anisotropy was observed for the contrast detection task, commonly used to measure surround suppression. The anisotropic masking, which defines crowding, is observed only at fine scales (roughly within an octave of the acuity limit), whereas surround suppression is observed at all scales. Our results demonstrate that surround suppression and crowding are indeed two distinct phenomena. We used this characteristic anisotropy to show that a popular crowding paradigm in which target contrast is varied to measure crowding is confounding it with surround suppression. Surround suppression apparently dominates at low contrasts, which would explain some of the reported similarities between the two phenomena.
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