The effects of amplitude-spectrum statistics on foveal and peripheral discrimination of changes in natural images, and a multi-resolution model
Psychophysical thresholds were measured for discriminating small changes in spatial features of naturalistic scenes (morph sequences), for foveal and peripheral vision, and under M-scaling. Sensitivity was greatest for scenes with near natural Fourier amplitude slope, perhaps implying that human vis...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Vision research (Oxford) 2005-11, Vol.45 (25), p.3145-3168 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Psychophysical thresholds were measured for discriminating small changes in spatial features of naturalistic scenes (morph sequences), for foveal and peripheral vision, and under M-scaling. Sensitivity was greatest for scenes with near natural Fourier amplitude slope, perhaps implying that human vision is optimised for natural scene statistics. A low-level model calculated differences in local contrast between pairs of images within a few spatial frequency channels with bandwidth like neurons in V1. The model was “customised” to each observer’s contrast sensitivity function for sinusoidal gratings, and it could replicate the “U-shaped” relationships between discrimination threshold and spectral slope, and many differences between picture sets and observers. A single-channel model and an ideal-observer analysis both failed to capture the U-shape. |
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ISSN: | 0042-6989 1878-5646 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.visres.2005.08.006 |