Wa. Simpson et Ba. Finsten, PEDESTAL EFFECT IN VISUAL-MOTION DISCRIMINATION, Journal of the Optical Society of America. A, Optics, image science,and vision., 12(12), 1995, pp. 2555-2563
Many sensory discriminations, including the discrimination of speed, o
bey Weber's law and thus become more difficult as the stimuli get larg
er. Using one-jump apparent motion stimuli, we find that the opposite
can occur: displacement discrimination improves with larger jumps. Thi
s pedestal effect occurs for small jumps near and below the detection
threshold. Finding a pedestal effect in motion discrimination confirms
a speed energy model developed in previous experiments on the detecti
on of jump pairs, since the pedestal effect will be observed if the vi
sual system detects the energy of the speed waveform. Once the size of
the jumps becomes large enough, the discriminability declines, indica
ting masking. Masking is just the detectability counterpart of Weber's
law; it is not predicted from energy detection. The pedestal effect s
hows the presence of a squaring nonlinearity for small speed signals,
and masking indicates linear transduction for large signals. A half-wa
ve rectifier, when presented with Gaussian noise, behaves this way. Th
e speed energy model can be seen as an approximation, valid for small
signals, to a model that includes half-wave rectification. (C) 1995 Op
tical Society of America