Psychological Sciences, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Victoria, Australia.
PLoS One. 2011 May 4;6(5):e18978. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0018978.
When an observer is presented with dissimilar images to the right and left eye, the images will alternate every few seconds in a phenomenon known as binocular rivalry. During sustained viewing, the timing of these switches appears to be unpredictable. Recent research has suggested that the initial 'onset' period of rivalry is not random and may be different in its neural mechanism than subsequent dominance periods. It is known that differences in luminance and contrast have a significant influence on the average dominance during sustained rivalry and that perception of luminance can vary between individuals and across the visual field. We therefore investigated whether perception of luminance contrast plays a role in onset rivalry. Observers viewed rival targets of equal brightness for brief presentations in eight locations of the near periphery and reported the color that was first dominant in each location. Results show that minimizing differences in brightness and contrast yields a stronger pattern of onset dominance bias and reveals evidence of monocular dominance. The results suggest that both contrast and monocular dominance play a role in onset dominance, though neither can fully explain the effect.
当观察者的左右眼接收到不同的图像时,这些图像会每隔几秒钟交替出现,这一现象被称为双眼竞争。在持续观察期间,这些转换的时间似乎是不可预测的。最近的研究表明,竞争的初始“起始”阶段并非随机,其神经机制可能与后续的主导阶段不同。众所周知,亮度和对比度的差异对持续竞争期间的平均主导地位有显著影响,并且个体之间以及整个视野内的亮度感知也可能有所不同。因此,我们研究了亮度对比度的感知是否在起始竞争中起作用。观察者在近周边的八个位置短暂地观察到亮度相等的竞争目标,并报告每个位置中首先占主导地位的颜色。结果表明,最小化亮度和对比度的差异会产生更强的起始主导优势模式,并显示出单眼优势的证据。结果表明,对比度和单眼优势都在起始主导中起作用,尽管两者都不能完全解释这种效应。