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Title: Periodicity in orientation discrimination and the unconfounding of visual information. Author: Regan D, Price P. Journal: Vision Res; 1986; 26(8):1299-302. PubMed ID: 3798764. Abstract: Orientation discrimination is a periodic function of mean orientation. Discrimination sensitivity (i.e. threshold-1) was measured at 7.5 deg increments around the clock for an 8 c/deg grating subtending 1.0 deg dia located 1.25 deg from the foveal centre. Discrimination sensitivity was best for horizontal and vertical orientations, but did not fall monotonically to minima at 45 deg and 135 deg. Instead it fell precipitously to minima at angles of only 20 deg to the horizontal and vertical, and there was a weak submaximum near 45 deg. This finding is consistent with the proposal that orientation discrimination is determined by the relative activity of broadly-tuned, orientation-sensitive neural elements, and that only a small number of elements are effective in any small retinal region. This idea can also explain why subjects do not confound a change of orientation with a simultaneous change of contrast or spatial frequency.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]