Abstract

Te orientation bandwidths of psychophysically defined channels of human vision were estimated by two techniques for a wide range of spatial and temporal frequencies. The first technique was an adaptation paradigm, where the subjects' ability to see patterns of various orientations was measured before and after adapting to a high contrast pattern. The second technique evaluated subjects' ability to discriminate between two gratings of different orientations in relation to their ability to detect the patterns. Bandwidths were unaffected by temporal frequency at high spatial frequencies but increased with temporal frequency at low spatial frequencies. Bandwidths increased modestly with decreasing spatial frequency at low temporal frequencies but more drastically at high temporal frequencies. Both techniques gave similar results except for patterns with very low spatial and high temporal frequencies. In this region the stimulus appears “spatial-frequency doubled” which may be used as a cue for the orientation discrimination task.

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