Binocular summation of second-order global motion signals in human vision

Claire V. Hutchinson*, Tim Ledgeway, Harriet A. Allen, Mike D. Long, Amanda Arena

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Although many studies have examined the principles governing first-order global motion perception, the mechanisms that mediate second-order global motion perception remain unresolved. This study investigated the existence, nature and extent of the binocular advantage for encoding second-order (contrast-defined) global motion. Motion coherence thresholds (79.4% correct) were assessed for determining the direction of radial, rotational and translational second-order motion trajectories as a function of local element modulation depth (contrast) under monocular and binocular viewing conditions. We found a binocular advantage for second-order global motion processing for all motion types. This advantage was mainly one of enhanced modulation sensitivity, rather than of motion-integration. However, compared to findings for first-order motion where the binocular advantage was in the region of a factor of around 1.7 (Hess et al., 2007), the binocular advantage for second-order global motion was marginal, being in the region of around 1.2. This weak enhancement in sensitivity with binocular viewing is considerably less than would be predicted by conventional models of either probability summation or neural summation.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)16-25
    Number of pages10
    JournalVision Research: An International Journal for Functional Aspects of Vision
    Volume84
    Early online date18 Mar 2013
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 24 May 2013

    Keywords

    • global motion
    • binocular summation
    • second-order
    • first-order

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