Abstract

Binocular summation, an improvement in visual performance with binocular viewing compared to monocular viewing, has been studied extensively in detection tasks. Monocular detection thresholds for stationary stimuli are typically about 40% higher than binocular thresholds. Binocular summation in discrimination tasks, however, is often lower and less consistent. A possible explanation for this difference is that saturation of responses limits the extent of binocular summation in discrimination tasks. To investigate this possibility, we used an orientation discrimination task and varied stimulus contrast and exposure duration. Monocular and binocular orientation discrimination thresholds were obtained using one-dimensional difference-of-Gaussian stimuli. For briefly exposed stimuli, binocular summation is greatest at low contrasts (e.g. 66% at 8% contrast) and is reduced systematically at higher contrasts so that monocular and binocular thresholds are approximately equal at contrasts above 15%. Binocular summation for low-contrast stimuli is greatest at a brief exposure duration (50 msec), is reduced at longer durations, and is not significant at durations of 100 msec or longer. Thus, binocular summation in orientation discrimination is greatest for relatively low-energy stimuli. These results are consistent with models of binocular energy summation and the hypothesis that saturation of responses after binocular combination can limit binocular summation in discrimination tasks.

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