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Two psychophysical experiments investigated perceptual differences between increases and decreases in stimulation of the short-wavelength (S) cone photoreceptors. In Experiment 1, observers’ suprathreshold perceptual scale responses to S cone stimulation were estimated using the Maximum Likelihood Difference Scaling (MLDS) procedure. In Experiment 2, observers’ pedestal discrimination thresholds were measured with a two alternative forced choice (2AFC) method. Both experiments were performed using incremental (S+) and decremental (S− ) contrasts separately. Substantial asymmetry between S+and S− was found in pedestal discrimination thresholds, but not in S+and S− perceptual scales: perceived S cone contrast was nearly linear with S cone contrast for both polarities. To reconcile perceptual scales and thresholds, a model is proposed in which the noise in the S cone pathway is assumed to be proportional to the square root of stimulus contrast. The model works well for both the perceptual scales and forced-choice discrimination, indicating that S+ and S− signals are processed in an asymmetrical way, likely due to the physiological differences between S ON and S OFF pathways.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available April 24, 2026
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In the Boynton Illusion, the perceived location of a low-contrast chromatic edge is altered by a nearby high-contrast luminance contour. Our study explores this color spreading effect across different chromatic directions using a position judgment task. We used the gap effect stimulus, which consists of a box evenly divided by a central contour, in half of the conditions. The suprathreshold chromatic test area embedded in the box provided a horizontal chromatic edge parallel to the central, high-contrast luminance contour that varied in its distance from the contour. An attraction effect of the nearest high-contrast contour on low-contrast chromatic and achromatic edges was observed. Specifically, when the test area is smaller than the region defined by the outer and middle contours, the edge is perceived to be closer to the middle contour (the colored area is perceived to be larger), a filling-in effect; conversely, when the test area extends beyond the middle contour, the edge is perceived to be closer to the middle contour (the colored area is perceived to be smaller), indicating a filling-out of color. Achromatic directions exhibit a relatively smaller effect than chromatic directions, whereas S-cone and equiluminant red and green edges show the same magnitude of positional displacement. The results can be interpreted as the visual system attempting to assign a single hue or brightness to a demarcated region.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available March 3, 2026
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Neon color spreading (NCS) is an illusory color phenomenon that provides a dramatic example of surface completion and filling-in. Numerous studies have varied both spatial and temporal aspects of the neon- generating stimulus to explore variations in the strength of the effect. Here, we take a novel, parametric, low- level psychophysical approach to studying NCS in two experiments. In Experiment 1, we test the ability of both cone-isolating and equiluminant stimuli to generate neon color spreading for both increments and decre- ments in cone modulations. As expected, sensitivity was low to S(hort-wavelength) cone stimuli due to their poor spatial resolution, but sensitivity was similar for the other color directions. We show that when these differences in detection sensitivity are accounted for, the particular cone type, and the polarity (increment or decrement), make little difference in generating neon color spreading, with NCS visible at about twice detection threshold level in all cases. In Experiment 2, we use L-cone flicker modulations (reddish and greenish excursions around grey) to study sensitivity to NCS as a function of temporal frequency from 0.5 to 8 Hz. After accounting for detectability, the temporal contrast sensitivity functions for NCS are approximately constant or even increase over the studied frequency range. Therefore there is no evidence in this study that the processes underlying NCS are slower than the low-level processes of simple flicker detection. These results point to relatively fast mech- anisms, not slow diffusion processes, as the substrate for NCS.more » « less
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The perceptual response to achromatic incremental (A+) and decremental (A–) visual stimuli is known to be asymmetrical, due most likely to differences between ON and OFF channels. In the current study, we further investigated this asymmetry psychophysically. In Experiment 1, maximum likelihood difference scaling (MLDS) was used to estimate separately observers’ perceptual scales for A+ and A–. In Experiment 2, observers performed two spatial alternative forced choice (2SAFC) pedestal discrimination on multiple pedestal contrast levels, using all combinations of A+ and A– pedestals and tests. Both experiments showed the well-known asymmetry. The perceptual scale curves of A+ follow a modified Naka–Rushton equation, whereas those of A– follow a cubic function. Correspondingly, the discrimination thresholds for the A+ pedestal increased monotonically with pedestal contrast, whereas the thresholds of the A– pedestal first increased as the pedestal contrast increased, then decreased as the contrast became higher. We propose a model that links the results of the two experiments, in which the pedestal discrimination threshold is inversely related to the derivative of the perceptual scale curve. Our findings generally agree with Whittle’s previous findings (Whittle, 1986, 1992), which also included strong asymmetry between A+ and A–. We suggest that the perception of achromatic balanced incremental and decremental (bipolar) stimuli, such as gratings or flicker, might be dominated by one polarity due to this asymmetry under some conditions.more » « less
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