Find-Health-Articles.com - making medical research available to everyone
Research article summary (published 27 Feb 2003):

The dynamics of bi-stable alternation in ambiguous motion displays: a fresh look at plaids.

Full Abstract

Prolonged observations of moving plaids lead to bi-stable alternations between coherency and transparency. However, most studies of plaids used brief presentations and a 2AFC between the two interpretations, thus overlooking the dynamical aspect of plaid perception. In other domains, most notably binocular rivalry, it was shown that the dynamics of the bi-stable alternations reveal important insights about the underlying mechanisms. Here we develop methods to study the dynamics of plaid perception. Observers continually indicated their percept (coherency or transparency) during presentations that lasted 1-5 min. Two measures of the relative strength of the coherency percept were derived from those data:
C/[C+T], the relative time spent seeing coherency, and RTtransp, the response time to report transparency. Those measures are independent of each other yet tightly correlated, and both show systematic relations to manipulations of plaid parameters. Furthermore, the two measures are sensitive to manipulations in wide parametric regimes, including ranges where brief-presentation methods suffer from "ceiling" and "floor" effects. We conclude that studying the dynamics of bi-stability in plaids can provide new and unsuspected findings about motion integration and segmentation.

 

Learn Faster Today      Improve your study skills

Author information

Author/s: Hupé, Jean-Michel (JM); Rubin, Nava (N);

Affiliation: Center for Neural Science, New York University, 4 Washington Place, New York, NY 10003, USA. jean-michel.hupe(-atsign-)cerco.ups-tlse.fr

Grants: R01-EY14030-01 (Agency:United States NEI)

Journal and publication information

Publication Type: Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't; Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.

Journal: Vision research (Vision Res), published in England. (Language: eng)

Reference: 2003-Mar; vol 43 (issue 5) : pp 531-48

Dates: Created 2003/02/21; Completed 2003/06/20; Revised 2007/11/14;

PMID: 12594999, status: MEDLINE (last retrieval date: 11/6/2008)

Sourced from the National Library of Medicine. Abstract text and other information may be subject to copyright.

External Links for this article (including full text providers, if available):

Click Electronic Full-text Provider Links to see options for finding the electronic full text links to this article. Note there may be a subscription or fee required for access to the full text. See our FAQ for information on finding FREE full text articles.

This article may also be located in paper journal collections available in many libraries. Use the Journal and Publication Information above to find the full article.

MeSH headings (categories)

This article was linked to the MESH Headings shown below.

Related articles

This article has not been indexed for related articles as yet, however you can still use the live related article search links below.

See 100+ related articles.

See a large map of 100+ related articles.

© Advanogy.com 2003-2008 (ACN 104 198 263) - All rights reserved. Terms of Use | Contact Us | Index