The Royal Society
Browse
rsos160534_si_001.pdf (3.08 MB)

Supplemental Material from Binocular combination of stimulus orientation

Download (3.08 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2016-11-04, 11:43 authored by O. Yehezkel, J. Ding, A. Sterkin, U. Polat, D.M. Levi
When two sinewaves that differ slightly in orientation are presented to the two eyes separately, a single cyclopean sinewave is perceived. However, it is unclear how the brain calculates its orientation. Here, we used a signal detection rating method to estimate the perceived orientation when the two eyes were presented with Gabor patches that differed in both orientation and contrast. We found a nearly linear combination of orientation when both targets had the same contrast. However, the binocular percept shifted away from the linear prediction towards the orientation with the higher contrast, depending on both the base contrast and the contrast ratio. We found that stimuli that differ slightly in orientation are combined into a single percept, similarly for monocular and binocular presentation, with a bias that depends on the interocular contrast ratio. Our results are well fit by gain-control models, and are consistent with a previous study that favoured the DKSL model that successfully predicts binocular phase and contrast combination and binocular contrast discrimination. In this model, the departures from linearity may be explained on the basis of mutual suppression and mutual enhancement, both of which are stronger under dichoptic than monocular conditions.

History

Usage metrics

    Royal Society Open Science

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC