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Science 9 October 1970:
Vol. 170. no. 3954, pp. 197 - 199
DOI: 10.1126/science.170.3954.197

Articles

Temporal Summation Phenomena at Threshold: Their Relation to Visual Mechanisms

James L. Zacks 1

1 Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19104

Threshold energies were determined for brief flashes as a function of their duration in order to determine the maximum duration for which the flash intensity and duration could be varied reciprocally without affecting detectability (the Bunsen-Roscoe effect). A pair of threshold-level flashes for which reciprocity obtained in the determination of threshold were shown to be discriminable from each other at several imperfectly detectable energy levels. Thus equal detectability of flashes of equal energy does not imply identical neural responses to such stimuli. It is suggested that the summation reflects primarily the operation of the detection mechanism rather than of the peripheral visual mechanism. Some general implications for the interpretation of threshold measures are also discussed.


THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
The Role of Temporal Structure in Human Vision.
R. Blake and S.-H. Lee (2005)
Behav Cogn Neurosci Rev 4, 21-42
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Temporal Summation of Light by a Vertebrate Visual Receptor.
D. C. Hood and B. G. Grover (1974)
Science 184, 1003-1005
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