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Journal ArticleDOI

Temporal Summation Phenomena at Threshold: Their Relation to Visual Mechanisms

James L. Zacks
- 09 Oct 1970 - 
- Vol. 170, Iss: 3954, pp 197-199
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TLDR
Equal detectability of flashes of equal energy does not imply identical neural responses to such stimuli, and it is suggested that the summation reflects primarily the operation of the detection mechanism rather than of the peripheral visual mechanism.
Abstract
Threshold energies were determined for brief flashes as a function of their duration in order to determine the maximum duration for which the flash intensity and duration could be varied reciprocally without affecting detectability (the Bunsen-Roscoe effect). A pair of threshold-level flashes for which reciprocity obtained in the determination of threshold were shown to be discriminable from each other at several imperfectly detectable energy levels. Thus equal detectability of flashes of equal energy does not imply identical neural responses to such stimuli. It is suggested that the summation reflects primarily the operation of the detection mechanism rather than of the peripheral visual mechanism. Some general implications for the interpretation of threshold measures are also discussed.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A portrait of the substrate for self-stimulation.

TL;DR: Property of the neural tissue whose excitation eventuates in the reinforcing and motivating effects of electrical stimulation of the medial forebrain bundle (MFB) in the rat are described, providing physiological psychology with a model for studying the neurophysiological bases of learning and motivation in a higher vertebrate.
Journal ArticleDOI

Visual persistence: effects of flash luminance, duration and energy.

TL;DR: The systematic increase for equal-energy stimuli in the duration of the total visual response with increase in flash duration suggests a basis for the recent finding that at threshold equally-detectable stimuli of different durations are discriminable.
Journal ArticleDOI

Psychophysical theories of duration discrimination

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss three theories of duration discrimination and several empirical findings, and compare the three theories in terms of their ability to incorporate empirical data, and the duration discrimination psychometric function is examined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Absolute timing of mental activities

TL;DR: In this paper, the form of the temporal summation function (relating the intensity and duration required to evoke a criterion neural signal) depends on the analysis used by the investigator and corresponding form variations occur in behavioral studies when the observer's task is varied.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Temporal and spatial summation in human vision at different background intensities

TL;DR: The present experiments show up the complicated interrelations between temporal and spatial summation and background intensity; tentative explanations of these effects, and of the failure to perform up to the quantal fluctuation limit, are put forward.
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Responses of cat retinal ganglion cells to brief flashes of light.

TL;DR: The responses of cat retinal ganglion cells to brief flashes of light have been illustrated and described with a view to providing material for comparison with psychophysical experiments in the scotopic (rod‐dominated) range of performance.
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The time-intensity relation in visual perception as a function of observer's task.

TL;DR: The duration-intensity relationship was investigated for a task in which triads of digits were to be identified and it was concluded that tc varies as a function of perceptual task and that it does not represent the duration of an early "sensory" phase of the visual process.
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The interpretation of two-pulse measures of temporal resolution in vision.

TL;DR: Cue reports taken in conjunction with measures of accuracy indicate that two-pulse manipulations produce complex perceptual changes which cannot always be related to temporal resolution.