Journal article

The dynamics of visual pattern masking in natural scene processing: A magnetoencephalography study


Authors listRieger, JW; Braun, C; Bülthoff, HH; Gegenfurtner, KR

Publication year2005

Pages275-286

JournalJournal of Vision

Volume number5

Issue number3

ISSN1534-7362

Open access statusGold

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1167/5.3.10

PublisherAssociation for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology


Abstract
We investigated the dynamics of natural scene processing and mechanisms of pattern masking in a scene-recognition task. Psychophysical recognition performance and the magnetoencephalogram (MEG) were recorded simultaneously. Photographs of natural scenes were briefly displayed and in the masked condition immediately followed by a pattern mask. Viewing the scenes without masking elicited a transient occipital activation that started approximately 70 ms after the pattern onset, peaked at 110 ms, and ended after 170 ms. When a mask followed the target an additional transient could be reliably identified in the MEG traces. We assessed psychophysical performance levels at different latencies of this transient. Recognition rates were reduced only when the additional activation produced by the pattern mask overlapped with the initial 170 ms of occipital activation from the target. Our results are commensurate with an early cortical locus of pattern masking and indicate that 90 ms of undistorted cortical processing is necessary to reliably recognize a scene. Our data also indicate that as little as 20 ms of undistorted processing is sufficient for above-chance discrimination of a scene from a distracter.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleRieger, J., Braun, C., Bülthoff, H. and Gegenfurtner, K. (2005) The dynamics of visual pattern masking in natural scene processing: A magnetoencephalography study, Journal of Vision, 5(3), pp. 275-286. https://doi.org/10.1167/5.3.10

APA Citation styleRieger, J., Braun, C., Bülthoff, H., & Gegenfurtner, K. (2005). The dynamics of visual pattern masking in natural scene processing: A magnetoencephalography study. Journal of Vision. 5(3), 275-286. https://doi.org/10.1167/5.3.10


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