Chung Susana T L, Bedell Harold E
College of Optometry, University of Houston, 505 J.D. Armistead Building, Houston, TX 77204-2020, USA.
Vision Res. 2003 Mar;43(6):669-82. doi: 10.1016/s0042-6989(02)00628-4.
The ability to see fine detail diminishes when the target of interest moves at a speed greater than a few deg/s. The purpose of this study was to identify fundamental limitations on spatial acuity that result from image motion. Discrimination of Vernier offset was measured for a pair of vertical abutting lines and letter resolution was measured using a four-orientation letter 'T'. These stimuli were digitally filtered using one of five band-pass (bandwidth=1.5 octaves) filters with a center frequency between 0.83 and 13.2 c/deg, and presented at velocities that ranged from 0 to 12 deg/s. Filtered and unfiltered stimuli were presented for 150 ms at a constant multiple (4x or 2x) of the contrast-detection threshold at each velocity. For stimuli of low to middle spatial frequency (up to 3.3 c/deg), Vernier and letter acuity for equally detectable targets are essentially unaffected by velocity up to 12 deg/s, i.e., for temporal frequencies of motion (velocity x spatial frequency) up to approximately 50 Hz. For stimuli of higher spatial frequency, acuity remains essentially constant until the velocity corresponds to a temporal frequency of about 30 Hz, and increases thereafter. Both Vernier and letter acuities worsen by approximately a factor of two for each one-octave decrease in filter spatial frequency. Both types of acuities worsen also as the contrast of the stimulus is reduced, but Vernier discrimination exhibits a stronger contrast-dependence than letter resolution. Our results support previous suggestions that a shift in the spatial scale used by the visual system to analyze spatial stimuli is principally responsible for the degradation of acuity in the presence of image motion. The results are consistent with a spatio-temporal-frequency limitation on spatial thresholds for moving stimuli, and not with a temporal-frequency limitation per se.
当感兴趣的目标以大于每秒几度的速度移动时,分辨精细细节的能力会下降。本研究的目的是确定由图像运动导致的空间敏锐度的基本限制。使用一对垂直邻接线测量游标偏移辨别力,并用一个四方向字母“T”测量字母分辨率。这些刺激通过五个带通(带宽 = 1.5倍频程)滤波器之一进行数字滤波,中心频率在0.83至13.2周/度之间,并以0至12度/秒的速度呈现。在每个速度下,以对比度检测阈值的恒定倍数(4倍或2倍)将滤波后的和未滤波的刺激呈现150毫秒。对于低至中等空间频率(高达3.3周/度)的刺激,对于同等可检测的目标,游标和字母敏锐度在速度高达12度/秒时基本不受影响,即对于高达约50赫兹的运动时间频率(速度×空间频率)。对于更高空间频率的刺激,敏锐度在速度对应于约30赫兹的时间频率之前基本保持恒定,此后增加。滤波器空间频率每降低一个倍频程,游标和字母敏锐度都会恶化约两倍。随着刺激对比度的降低,两种类型的敏锐度也会恶化,但游标辨别力比字母分辨率表现出更强的对比度依赖性。我们的结果支持先前的观点,即视觉系统用于分析空间刺激的空间尺度的变化是图像运动存在时敏锐度下降的主要原因。结果与移动刺激的空间阈值的时空频率限制一致,而不是与时间频率限制本身一致。