Bonneh Yoram S, Donner Tobias H, Cooperman Alexander, Heeger David J, Sagi Dov
Department of Human Biology, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel; Department of Neurobiology, The Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot, Israel.
Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands; Cognitive Science Center, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands; Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience, Charité-Universitätsmedizin, Berlin, Germany; Department of Psychology and Center for Neural Science, New York University, New York, New York, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Mar 21;9(3):e92894. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0092894. eCollection 2014.
Extended stabilization of gaze leads to disappearance of dim visual targets presented peripherally. This phenomenon, known as Troxler fading, is thought to result from neuronal adaptation. Intense targets also disappear intermittently when surrounded by a moving pattern (the "mask"), a phenomenon known as motion-induced blindness (MIB). The similar phenomenology and dynamics of these disappearances may suggest that also MIB is, likewise, solely due to adaptation, which may be amplified by the presence of the mask. Here we directly compared the dependence of both phenomena on target contrast. Observers reported the disappearance and reappearance of a target of varying intensity (contrast levels: 8%-80%). MIB was induced by adding a mask that moved at one of various different speeds. The results revealed a lawful effect of contrast in both MIB and Troxler fading, but with opposite trends. Increasing target contrast increased (doubled) the rate of disappearance events for MIB, but decreased the disappearance rate to half in Troxler fading. The target mean invisible period decreased equally strongly with target contrast in MIB and in Troxler fading. The results suggest that both MIB and Troxler are equally affected by contrast adaptation, but that the rate of MIB is governed by an additional mechanism, possibly involving antagonistic processes between neuronal populations processing target and mask. Our results link MIB to other bi-stable visual phenomena that involve neuronal competition (such as binocular rivalry), which exhibit an analogous dependency on the strength of the competing stimulus components.
长时间稳定注视会导致周边呈现的暗淡视觉目标消失。这种现象被称为特罗克斯勒消退,被认为是神经元适应的结果。当强烈的目标被一个移动的图案(“掩蔽物”)包围时,也会间歇性地消失,这种现象被称为运动诱导失明(MIB)。这些消失现象的相似现象学和动力学可能表明,MIB同样也仅仅是由于适应,而掩蔽物的存在可能会放大这种适应。在这里,我们直接比较了这两种现象对目标对比度的依赖性。观察者报告了不同强度(对比度水平:8%-80%)的目标的消失和重新出现。通过添加以不同速度之一移动的掩蔽物来诱发MIB。结果揭示了对比度在MIB和特罗克斯勒消退中都有规律的影响,但趋势相反。增加目标对比度会增加(使加倍)MIB中消失事件的发生率,但会使特罗克斯勒消退中的消失率降低一半。在MIB和特罗克斯勒消退中,目标平均不可见期随目标对比度的降低同样强烈。结果表明,MIB和特罗克斯勒消退同样受到对比度适应的影响,但MIB的发生率受另一种机制支配,可能涉及处理目标和掩蔽物的神经元群体之间的拮抗过程。我们的结果将MIB与其他涉及神经元竞争的双稳态视觉现象(如双眼竞争)联系起来,这些现象对竞争刺激成分的强度表现出类似的依赖性。