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The integration window for shape cues is a function of ambient illumination

Ernest Greene1,2 email

Laboratory for Neurometric Research, Department of Psychology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California 90089-1061, USA

Neuropsychology Foundation, Sun Valley, CA 91353, USA

author email corresponding author email

Behavioral and Brain Functions 2007, 3:15doi:10.1186/1744-9081-3-15

Published: 14 March 2007

Abstract

Minimal discrete shape cues, i.e., dots that marked positions on the outer boundary of namable objects, were divided into two subsets, which were shown very quickly with a variable delay between subsets. Recognition of a given object required integration of the information provided by the two subsets, and previous research had found that recognition declined as the delay between subsets was increased. The present experiment found the decline in recognition to be linear for each of several levels of ambient illumination, dropping rapidly under photopic test conditions, and with the slope being progressively less steep with transition into the scotopic range. The change in the duration of information persistence may be related to the density of information that is provided under various lighting conditions, and a requirement that the information be buffered against noise or "packaged" to accommodate successive saccades.


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