Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6203405 Vision Research 2014 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Perceptual grouping of stimulus arrays is not reliant upon foveal viewing.•Grouping by proximity and similarity is relatively stable to 40° eccentricity.•Eccentricity effects on grouping interact with element feature, size, and scale.

Across the visual field, progressive differences exist in neural processing as well as perceptual abilities. Expansion of stimulus scale across eccentricity compensates for some basic visual capacities, but not for high-order functions. It was hypothesized that as with many higher-order functions, perceptual grouping ability should decline across eccentricity. To test this prediction, psychophysical measurements of grouping were made across eccentricity. Participants indicated the dominant grouping of dot grids in which grouping was based upon luminance, motion, orientation, or proximity. Across trials, the organization of stimuli was systematically decreased until perceived grouping became ambiguous. For all stimulus features, grouping ability remained relatively stable until 40°, beyond which thresholds significantly elevated. The pattern of change across eccentricity varied across stimulus feature, in which stimulus scale, dot size, or stimulus size interacted with eccentricity effects. These results demonstrate that perceptual grouping of such stimuli is not reliant upon foveal viewing, and suggest that selection of dominant grouping patterns from ambiguous displays operates similarly across much of the visual field.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Sensory Systems
Authors
, , ,