The effects of contrast on visual orientation and spatial frequency discrimination: a comparison of single cells and behavior
B. C. Skottun, A. Bradley, G. Sclar, I. Ohzawa and R. D. Freeman We have compared the effects of contrast on human psychophysical orientation and spatial frequency discrimination thresholds and on the responses of individual neurons in the cat's striate cortex. Contrast has similar effects on o...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of neurophysiology 1987-03, Vol.57 (3), p.773-786 |
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Zusammenfassung: | B. C. Skottun, A. Bradley, G. Sclar, I. Ohzawa and R. D. Freeman
We have compared the effects of contrast on human psychophysical
orientation and spatial frequency discrimination thresholds and on the
responses of individual neurons in the cat's striate cortex. Contrast has
similar effects on orientation and spatial frequency discrimination: as
contrast is increased above detection threshold, orientation and spatial
frequency discrimination performance improves but reaches maximum levels at
quite low contrasts. Further increases in contrast produce no further
improvements in discrimination. We measured the effects of contrast on
response amplitude, orientation and spatial frequency selectivity, and
response variance of neurons in the cat's striate cortex. Orientation and
spatial frequency selectivity vary little with contrast. Also, the ratio of
response variance to response mean is unaffected by contrast. Although, in
many cells, response amplitude increases approximately linearly with log
contrast over most of the visible range, some cells show complete or
partial saturation of response amplitude at medium contrasts. Therefore,
some cells show a clear increase in slope of the orientation and spatial
frequency tuning functions with increasing contrast, whereas in others the
slopes reach maximum values at medium contrasts. Using receiver operating
characteristic analysis, we estimated the minimum orientation and spatial
frequency differences that can be signaled reliably as a response change by
an individual cell. This analysis shows that, on average, the
discrimination of orientation or spatial frequency improves with contrast
at low contrasts more than at higher contrasts. Using the optimal stimulus
for each cell, we estimated the contrast threshold of 48 neurons. Most
cells had contrast thresholds below 5%. Thresholds were only slightly
higher for nonoptimal stimuli. Therefore, increasing the contrast of
sinusoidal gratings above approximately 10% will not produce large
increases in the number of responding cells. The observed effects of
contrast on the response characteristics of nonsaturating cortical cells do
not appear consistent with the psychophysical results. Cells that reach
their maximum response at low-to-medium contrasts may account for the
contrast independence of psychophysical orientation and spatial frequency
discrimination thresholds at medium and high contrasts. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3077 1522-1598 |
DOI: | 10.1152/jn.1987.57.3.773 |