Sheliga B M, Kodaka Y, FitzGibbon E J, Miles F A
Laboratory of Sensorimotor Research, National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA.
Vision Res. 2006 Jun;46(13):2041-60. doi: 10.1016/j.visres.2005.11.033. Epub 2006 Feb 20.
The initial ocular following responses (OFRs) elicited by 1/4-wavelength steps applied to the missing fundamental (mf) stimulus are in the backward direction and largely determined by the principal Fourier component, the 3rd harmonic [Sheliga, B. M., Chen, K. J., FitzGibbon, E. J., & Miles, F. A. (2005). Initial ocular following in humans: A response to first-order motion energy. Vision Research, 45, 3307-3321]. When the contrast of the 3rd harmonic was selectively reduced below that of the next most prominent harmonic-the 5th, which moves in the opposite (forward) direction-then the OFR reversed direction and the 3rd harmonic effectively lost all of its influence as the OFR was now largely determined by the 5th harmonic. Restricting the stimulus to just two sine waves (of equal efficacy when of equal contrast and presented singly) with the spatial frequencies of the 3rd and 5th harmonics of the mf stimulus indicated that the critical factor was the ratio of their two contrasts: when of similar contrast both were effective (vector sum/averaging), but when the contrast of one was <1/2 that of the other then the one with the lower contrast became ineffective (winner-take-all). This nonlinear dependence on the contrast ratio was attributed to mutual inhibition and was well described by a weighted-average model with just two free parameters. Further experiments with broadband and dual-grating stimuli indicated that nonlinear interactions occur not only in the neural processing of stimuli moving in opposite directions but also of stimuli that share the same direction and differ only in their spatial frequency and speed. Clearly, broad-band and dual-grating stimuli can uncover significant nonlinearities in visual information processing that are not evident with single sine-wave stimuli.
对缺失基频(mf)刺激施加1/4波长步长所引发的初始眼跟踪反应(OFRs)是向后的,并且在很大程度上由主要傅里叶分量即三次谐波决定[谢利加,B. M.,陈,K. J.,菲茨吉本,E. J.,& 迈尔斯,F. A.(2005年)。人类的初始眼跟踪:对一阶运动能量的反应。《视觉研究》,45,3307 - 3321]。当三次谐波的对比度被选择性地降低到低于下一个最突出的谐波——五次谐波(其向相反(向前)方向移动)的对比度时,那么OFR就会反转方向,并且三次谐波实际上失去了所有影响,因为此时OFR在很大程度上由五次谐波决定。将刺激限制为仅两个具有mf刺激的三次和五次谐波空间频率的正弦波(当对比度相等且单独呈现时具有相等效力)表明,关键因素是它们两者对比度的比率:当对比度相似时两者都有效(矢量和/平均),但当其中一个的对比度小于另一个的1/2时,对比度较低的那个就变得无效(赢家通吃)。这种对对比度比率的非线性依赖归因于相互抑制,并且由一个仅具有两个自由参数的加权平均模型很好地描述。使用宽带和双光栅刺激的进一步实验表明,非线性相互作用不仅发生在相反方向移动的刺激的神经处理中,而且也发生在具有相同方向且仅在空间频率和速度上不同的刺激的神经处理中。显然,宽带和双光栅刺激可以揭示视觉信息处理中显著的非线性,而这些非线性在单个正弦波刺激中并不明显。