Abstract
Observers were shown patterns composed of two textures in which each texture contained two types of elements. The elements were arranged in a striped pattern in the top and bottom regions and in a checked pattern in the center region. Observers rated the degree to which the three regions were seen as distinct. When the elements were squares or lines, perceived segregation resulting from differences in element size could be canceled by differences in element contrast. Minimal perceived segregation occurred when the products of the area and the contrast (areal contrasts) of the elements were equal. This dependence of perceived segregation on the areal contrasts of the elements is consistent with a simple model based on the hypothesis that the perceived segregation of the regions is a function of their differential stimulation of spatial-frequency channels. Two aspects of the data were not consistent with quantitative predictions of the model. First, as the size difference between the large and small elements increased, the ratings at the point of minimum perceived segregation increased. Second, some effects of changing the fundamental frequency of the textures were not predicted by the model. These discrepancies may be explained by a more complex model in which a rectification or similar nonlinearity occurs between two stages of orientation- and spatial-frequency-selective linear filters.
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This research was supported by AFOSR Grant AFOSR-85-0359 to Jacob Beck and by NIMH Fellowship MH09449 to Norma Graham. Experiments 1 and 4 were performed in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the PhD degree at the University of Oregon by Anne Sutter. Much of this work was presented at the May 1988 meeting of the Association of Researchers in Vision and Ophthalmology (Sutter, Graham, & Beck, 1988).
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Sutter, A., Beck, J. & Graham, N. Contrast and spatial variables in texture segregation: Testing a simple spatial-frequency channels model. Perception & Psychophysics 46, 312–332 (1989). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03204985
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03204985