Elsevier

Vision Research

Volume 46, Issue 23, November 2006, Pages 3977-3993
Vision Research

Cue combination in a combined feature contrast detection and figure identification task

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.visres.2006.07.009Get rights and content
Under an Elsevier user license
open archive

Abstract

Target figures defined by feature contrast in spatial frequency, orientation or both cues had to be detected in Gabor random fields and their shape had to be identified in a dual task paradigm. Performance improved with increasing feature contrast and was strongly correlated among both tasks. Subjects performed significantly better with combined cues than with single cues. The improvement due to cue summation was stronger than predicted by the assumption of independent feature specific mechanisms, and increased with the performance level achieved with single cues until it was limited by ceiling effects. Further, cue summation was also strongly correlated among tasks: when there was benefit due to the additional cue in feature contrast detection, there was also benefit in figure identification. For the same performance level achieved with single cues, cue summation was generally larger in figure identification than in feature contrast detection, indicating more benefit when processes of shape and surface formation are involved. Our results suggest that cue combination improves spatial form completion and figure-ground segregation in noisy environments, and therefore leads to more stable object vision.

Keywords

Feature contrast
Cue combination
Figure-ground segregation

Cited by (0)