Regan D, Hamstra S J
Institute for Space and Terrestrial Science, York University, North York, Ontario, Canada.
Vision Res. 1992 Oct;32(10):1845-64. doi: 10.1016/0042-6989(92)90046-l.
We measured the accuracy with which subjects judged that a square or circle was perfectly symmetrical i.e. that aspect ratio (a/b) was exactly unity (where a and b were, respectively, the vertical and horizontal dimensions). Errors were remarkably small, ranging from 0.7 to 0.4% for the judgement of squareness and from 1.4 to < 0.1% for the judgement of circularity. Precision in judging aspect ratio was measured by requiring subjects to judge whether the aspect ratio (a/b)TEST of a test rectangle was greater or less than the aspect ratio (a/b)REF of a reference rectangle. Similar measurements were made for elliptical targets. To ensure that subjects based judgements on aspect ratio rather than a, b or (a-b), the area of each successive presentation was varied randomly. The just-discriminable percentage change of aspect ratio was as low as 1.6% at (a/b)REF = 1.0 (i.e. for a square or circular reference), and rose progressively as (a/b)REF was made progressively larger or smaller than 1.0. Aspect ratio discrimination threshold was independent of mean area over a sixteen-fold range of 0.25-4.0 deg2. For both rectangles and ellipses, the best value of aspect ratio discrimination threshold corresponded to a precision of encoding a and b of 14 sec arc or better. In further experiments, the method of constant stimuli was used to measure an aspect ratio aftereffect produced by adapting separately to rectangles of (a/b)ADAPT equal to 1.5, 1.0 and (1/1.5). Similar aftereffects were obtained whether the area of the test stimulus was fixed or varied randomly from trial to trial, and whether the test stimulus was rectangular or elliptical. The aftereffect could not be explained in terms of fatigue of neurons sensitive to linear dimension a or b. Nor could the aftereffect be explained in terms of the "contour repulsion" hypothesis, or in terms of orientation discrimination. We conclude (1) that the same neural mechanism determines aspect ratio discrimination threshold for rectangles and ellipses and (2) that this mechanism is sensitive to aspect ratio independently of linear dimensions. We propose that aspect ratio perception is determined by the balance of excitation of two pools of neurons that are selectively sensitive to different, but overlapping ranges of (a/b). One pool prefers aspect ratios > 1.0 and the others prefer aspect ratios < 1.0. We suppose that the two pools respond identically to changes in area (a * b).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
我们测量了受试者判断正方形或圆形是否完全对称的准确性,即长宽比(a/b)是否恰好为1(其中a和b分别为垂直和水平尺寸)。误差非常小,判断正方形时误差范围为0.7%至0.4%,判断圆形时误差范围为1.4%至小于0.1%。通过要求受试者判断测试矩形的长宽比(a/b)TEST大于还是小于参考矩形的长宽比(a/b)REF来测量判断长宽比的精度。对椭圆形目标进行了类似的测量。为确保受试者基于长宽比而非a、b或(a-b)进行判断,每次连续呈现的面积随机变化。在(a/b)REF = 1.0时(即对于正方形或圆形参考),长宽比的可辨别百分比变化低至1.6%,并且随着(a/b)REF逐渐大于或小于1.0而逐渐增加。长宽比辨别阈值在0.25 - 4.0平方度的十六倍范围内与平均面积无关。对于矩形和椭圆形,长宽比辨别阈值的最佳值对应于对a和b进行编码的精度为14秒弧度或更高。在进一步的实验中,使用恒定刺激法测量分别适应长宽比(a/b)ADAPT等于1.5、1.0和(1/1.5)的矩形后产生的长宽比后效应。无论测试刺激的面积是固定的还是每次试验随机变化,以及测试刺激是矩形还是椭圆形,都获得了类似的后效应。后效应无法用对线性尺寸a或b敏感的神经元疲劳来解释。后效应也无法用“轮廓排斥”假说来解释,也无法用方向辨别来解释。我们得出结论:(1)相同的神经机制决定矩形和椭圆形的长宽比辨别阈值;(2)该机制对长宽比敏感,与线性尺寸无关。我们提出,长宽比感知由对不同但重叠的(a/b)范围有选择性敏感的两群神经元的兴奋平衡决定。一群偏好长宽比>1.0,另一群偏好长宽比<1.0。我们假设这两群神经元对面积(a * b)的变化反应相同。(摘要截于400字)