- The Perception of Transparency in Moving Square-Wave Plaids
- H. Farid and E.P. Simoncelli
- Investigative Opthalmology and Visual Science (ARVO), Sarasota, FL, 1994
Purpose: We performed psychophysical experiments to determine
the rules governing the perception of transparency in additive
square-wave plaids.
Methods: Subjects were presented with a randomized sequence
of square-wave plaids of varying grating speed, grating orientation
and plaid intersection luminance. The two gratings were symmetrically
oriented about vertical, with fixed and equal period and duty-cycle.
Presentations lasted two seconds, with a three second inter-trial
interval. Subjects were asked whether the stimulus appeared to be
transparent or coherent.
Results: Our experimental results suggest that the perception
of transparency is primarily governed by the pattern speed and the
grating speed. In particular, when the pattern speed exceeds a
certain critical speed (Sc), the plaid is more likely to be seen as
transparent. Furthermore, when the grating speed exceeds the critical
speed, subjects report being unable to make clear judgements. This
result is illustrated in the idealized diagram of subject response
versus pattern speed (Sp) and grating speed (Sg) shown to the right.
Further studies suggest that varying the luminance of the plaid
intersections (see Stoner, et. al.,1990) seems to affect the percept
of transparency only when the pattern speed is close to the critical
speed.
Conclusions: The existence of such a critical speed suggests
that the human visual system may have a perceptual preference for
slower speeds. This data and the original data of Stoner, et. al. is
consistent with a fairly simple energy-based model for velocity
computation in which the representation of velocity is speed-limited.
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