Temporal coherence theory for the detection and measurement of visual motion Journal Article


Authors: Grzywacz, N. M.; Watamaniuk, S. N.; McKee, S. P.
Article Title: Temporal coherence theory for the detection and measurement of visual motion
Abstract: A recent challenge to the completeness of some influential models of local-motion detection has come from experiments in which subjects had to detect a single dot moving along a trajectory amidst noise dots undergoing Brownian motion. We propose and test a new theory of the detection and measurement of visual motion, which can account for these signal-in-Brownian-noise experiments. The theory postulates that the signals from local-motion detectors are made coherent in space and time by a special purpose network, and that this coherence boosts signals of features moving along non-random trajectories over time. Two experiments were performed to estimate parameters and test the theory. These experiments showed that detection is impaired with increasing eccentricity, an effect that varies inversely with step size. They also showed that detection improves over durations extending to at least 600 msec. An implementation of the theory accounts for these psychophysical detection measurements.
Journal Title: Vision research
Volume: 35
Issue: 22
ISSN: 0042-6989
Publisher: Unknown  
Journal Place: England
Date Published: 1995
Start Page: 3183
End Page: 3203
Language: eng
DOI/URL:
Notes: J2: Vision Res