Joffe K M, Scialfa C T
Department of Psychology, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Spat Vis. 1995;9(3):325-42. doi: 10.1163/156856895x00034.
Two experiments examined the role of fundamental spatial frequency, target area and retinal eccentricity in texture segmentation. In Experiment 1, a backward-masked target comprising lines oriented orthogonally to the surround was briefly presented at the fovea, and at eccentricities ranging from 2.55 to 7.63 deg. Reaction time and accuracy were better when targets were presented at non-foveal locations. In Experiment 2, eccentricity effects were examined when both spatial frequency and target area were varied. Accuracy was highest and RT fastest at near-peripheral, not foveal locations. The eccentricity corresponding to optimal performance was related inversely to spatial frequency. Results suggest that the near periphery is more adept than the fovea at the early processing which underlies rapid texture segmentation.
两项实验研究了基本空间频率、目标面积和视网膜偏心度在纹理分割中的作用。在实验1中,一个由与周围环境正交定向的线条组成的后向掩蔽目标在中央凹以及2.55至7.63度的偏心度位置短暂呈现。当目标在非中央凹位置呈现时,反应时间和准确率更高。在实验2中,研究了空间频率和目标面积都变化时的偏心度效应。在近周边而非中央凹位置,准确率最高且反应时间最快。对应最佳表现的偏心度与空间频率成反比。结果表明近周边在快速纹理分割所基于的早期处理方面比中央凹更擅长。