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Journal Article

Citation

Mancini S, Sally SL, Gurnsey R. Vision Res. 2005; 45(16): 2145-2160.

Affiliation

Department of Psychology, Concordia University, 7141 Sherbrooke Street West, Montréal, Qué., Canada H4B 1R6.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2005, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.visres.2005.02.004

PMID

15845246

Abstract

To assess the role of second-order channels in symmetry perception we measured the effects of check size, spatial frequency content, eccentricity and grey scale range on the detection of symmetrical and anti-symmetrical patterns. Thresholds for symmetrical stimuli were only moderately affected by these manipulations. Anti-symmetrical stimuli composed of large black and white checks elicited low thresholds. However, anti-symmetry became essentially undetectable at small check sizes. Removing low frequencies from large-check-size, anti-symmetrical stimuli had little effect on thresholds whereas removing high frequencies had a pronounced effect. Moving the stimuli from fixation to 8 degrees eccentricity caused a dramatic increase in thresholds for anti-symmetrical stimuli but not symmetrical stimuli. When the grey scale range was increased anti-symmetry was undetectable at any check size whereas symmetry was easily seen at all. We argue that these results and others in the literature suggest that anti-symmetry is only detected under conditions favourable to selective attention.

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