Abstract

Previous studies of the characteristics of suppression occurring under various visual conditions show similarities and differences which may be indicative of the mechanism of suppression. The primary purpose of this study was to determine if the suppression that occurs in response to an eyelid blink (blink suppression) is similar to that which occurs during a saccade (saccadic suppression). In addition, the characteristics of blink suppression and other forms of suppression (i.e. permanent and binocular rivalry suppression) are compared. A test probe paradigm was utilized to determine the effect of blink suppression on the spectral sensitivity function in three normal observers. Employing a two alternative forced choice technique, thresholds were determined for wavelengths from 420 to 680 nm in 20 nm steps. At each wavelength, the threshold was determined at 0 and 400 msec after the onset of a voluntary blink. The magnitude of suppression was taken as the difference between the 0 and 400 msec thresholds. Similar to saccadic suppression, the magnitude of blink suppression increased as the stimuli biased detection towards the luminance channel. These results suggest that blink suppression and saccadic suppression are the result of a single mechanism. Similarities between blink suppression and other forms of visual suppression are also considered.

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