| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4034786 | Vision Research | 2009 | 7 Pages | 
Abstract
												We used identification at threshold to systematically measure binding costs in two visual modalities. We presented a conjunction of two features as a signal stimulus and concurrently measured detection and identification performance as a function of three threshold variables: duration, contrast and coherence. Discrepancies between detection and identification sensitivity functions demonstrated a consistent processing cost to visual feature binding. Our findings suggest that feature binding is indeed a genuine problem for the brain to solve. This simple paradigm can transfer across arbitrary feature combinations and is therefore suitable to use in experiments addressing mechanisms of sensory integration.
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											Authors
												Kiley J. Seymour, J. Scott McDonald, Colin W.G. Clifford, 
											