Abstract

Contrast thresholds for briefly flashed gratings were measured by the QUEST procedure, under conditions of forward masking by gratings of the same spatial frequency (usually 1 c/deg). Low-contrast masks reduced threshold at short onset asynchronies (0 to 50 msec), while higher contrasts raised threshold over a broader temporal range (0 to 100–140 msec). Both effects depended on the spatial phase relation, but in different ways. Threshold reduction at 0–±90deg phases probably arises from spatio-temporal filtering by direction-selective mechanisms. This conclusion was supported by computer simulation of a motion detector model. The direction-selective stage of motion analysis may be entirely monocular, since facilitation at 90 deg was abolished by dichoptic presentation. Threshold elevation was phase-dependent at short SOA's (20–50 msec), with a minimum at ±90 deg, but was not phase-dependent at longer SOA's (70–140 msec). In-phase masking (0 deg) was about equally strong monocularly and dichoptically, but dichoptic threshold elevation showed no phase-dependence at any SOA. Threshold elevation at longer SOA's, and with dichoptic presentation, may reflect a purely suppressive binocular masking effect, unselective for spatial phase, and its basis may be the same as contrast adaptation. At short SOA's, monocular and binocular masking data apparently reflect a mixture of this phase-independent suppression and phase-selective facilitation.

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