Volume 6, Number 11, Article 7, Pages 1224-1243 doi:10.1167/6.11.7 http://journalofvision.org/6/11/7/ ISSN 1534-7362
Binocular contrast vision at and above threshold
Tim S. Meese
School of Life and Health Sciences, Aston University, Birmingham, UK
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Mark A. Georgeson
School of Life and Health Sciences, Aston University, Birmingham, UK
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Daniel H. Baker
School of Life and Health Sciences, Aston University, Birmingham, UK
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Abstract

A fundamental problem for any visual system with binocular overlap is the combination of information from the two eyes. Electrophysiology shows that binocular integration of luminance contrast occurs early in visual cortex, but a specific systems architecture has not been established for human vision. Here, we address this by performing binocular summation and monocular, binocular, and dichoptic masking experiments for horizontal 1 cycle per degree test and masking gratings. These data reject three previously published proposals, each of which predict too little binocular summation and insufficient dichoptic facilitation. However, a simple development of one of the rejected models (the twin summation model) and a completely new model (the two-stage model) provide very good fits to the data. Two features common to both models are gently accelerating (almost linear) contrast transduction prior to binocular summation and suppressive ocular interactions that contribute to contrast gain control. With all model parameters fixed, both models correctly predict (1) systematic variation in psychometric slopes, (2) dichoptic contrast matching, and (3) high levels of binocular summation for various levels of binocular pedestal contrast. A review of evidence from elsewhere leads us to favor the two-stage model.

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History
Received March 3, 2006; published October 23, 2006
Citation
Meese, T. S., Georgeson, M. A., & Baker, D. H. (2006). Binocular contrast vision at and above threshold. Journal of Vision, 6(11):7, 1224-1243, http://journalofvision.org/6/11/7/, doi:10.1167/6.11.7.
Keywords
model, human vision, psychophysics, binocular interactions, suppression, summation, gain control, masking
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