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Published August 2001 | Published
Journal Article Open

Spatial aspects of object formation revealed by a new illusion, shine-through

Abstract

When a vernier stimulus is presented for a short time and followed by a grating comprising five straight lines, the vernier remains invisible but may bequeath its offset to the grating (feature inheritance). For more than seven grating elements, the vernier is rendered visible as a shine-through element. However, shine-through depends strongly on the spatio-temporal layout of the grating. Here, we show that spatially inhomogeneous gratings diminish shine-through and vernier discrimination. Even subtle deviations, in the range of a few minutes of arc, matter. However, longer presentation times of the vernier regenerate shine-through. Feature inheritance and shine-through may become a useful tool in investigating such different topics as time course of information processing, feature binding, attention, and masking.

Additional Information

©2001 Elsevier Science Ltd. Received 21 September 2000; received in revised form 5 March 2001. k Vincent Di Lollo and an anonymous referee who helped to improve this ms. Michael Herzog was supported by a fellowship from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Forschungsstipendium) and the SFB 517 'Neurocognition' of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG). Christof Koch received funding from the Keck Foundation, NIMH and the NSF-sponsored Engineering Research Centre (ERC) at Caltech. Sven Heinrich's help in building up the equipment and maintaining the'computers was invaluable. We would like to thank our subjects who spent long times in front of the screen.

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Created:
September 15, 2023
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October 23, 2023