4.3 Article

Luminance texture boundaries and luminance step boundaries are segmented using different mechanisms

期刊

VISION RESEARCH
卷 190, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.visres.2021.107968

关键词

Texture; Segmentation; Luminance; Boundary; Psychophysics

资金

  1. NIH [NIH-R15-EY032732-01]

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The study found that observers are more sensitive to luminance differences defined by textures compared to uniform luminance steps. When segmenting natural texture boundaries, the presence of masking step boundaries had little effect on segmentation performance. This suggests that the visual system contains mechanisms well suited to detecting surface boundaries that are robust to interference from luminance differences arising from luminance steps like those formed by cast shadows.
In natural scenes, two adjacent surfaces may differ in mean luminance without any sharp change in luminance at their boundary, but rather due to different relative proportions of light and dark regions within each surface. We refer to such boundaries as luminance texture boundaries (LTBs), and in this study we investigate whether LTBs are segmented using different mechanisms than luminance step boundaries (LSBs). We develop a novel method to generate luminance texture boundaries from natural uniform textures, and using these natural LTB stimuli in a boundary segmentation task, we find that observers are much more sensitive to identical luminance differences which are defined by textures (LTBs) than by uniform luminance steps (LSBs), consistent with the possibility of different mechanisms. In a second and third set of experiments, we characterize observer performance segmenting natural LTBs in the presence of masking LSBs which observers are instructed to ignore. We show that there is very little effect of masking LSBs on LTB segmentation performance. Furthermore, any masking effects we find are far less than those observed in a control experiment where both the masker and target are LSBs, and far less than those predicted by a model assuming identical mechanisms. Finally, we perform a fourth set of boundary segmentation experiments using artificial LTB stimuli comprised of differing proportions of white and black dots on opposite sides of the boundary. We find that these stimuli are also highly robust to masking by supra-threshold LSBs, consistent with our results using natural stimuli, and with our earlier studies using similar stimuli. Taken as a whole, these results suggest that the visual system contains mechanisms well suited to detecting surface boundaries that are robust to interference from luminance differences arising from luminance steps like those formed by cast shadows.

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