Abstract
In primates, relatively slow sustained-like physiological mechanisms mediate chromatic processing and rapid transient-like mechanisms mediate low-spatial-frequency achromatic processing. Our objective was to investigate the role of transient and sustained mechanisms in the detection of chromatic and achromatic gratings with the use of a reaction time (RT) paradigm. Following Tolhurst (1975 Vision Research
When we used low-spatial-frequency (0.22 cycle deg−1) isoluminant red - green gratings, the RT histograms were unimodal, revealing detection mechanisms with predominantly sustained characteristics, as expected. RT histograms obtained with low-spatial-frequency achromatic stimuli in our study were bimodal. However, when we compared small and large fields, the shape of the RT histogram varied in a manner which could not be accounted for by a simple probabilistic model. This can be rationalised if onsets and offsets are not equally detectable.
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