Search results for "Psychophysic"

showing 10 items of 97 documents

Effects of emotional picture viewing on voluntary eye blinks

2014

Eyeblinks, whether reflexive or voluntary, play an important role in protecting our vision. When viewing pictures, reflexive eyeblinks are known to be modulated by the emotional state induced thereby. More specifically, the hedonic valence (unpleasantness-pleasantness) induced by the picture has been shown to have a linear relationship with the amplitude of a startle blink elicited during picture viewing. This effect has been attributed to congruence between an ongoing state and task demands: an unpleasant emotional state is assumed to bias our attention towards potentially harmful stimuli, such as startle tones. However, recent research suggests that the valence-specific modulation may not…

AdultMalePsychological Defense MechanismsEmotionslcsh:MedicineSensory systemElectromyographySocial and Behavioral SciencesAmygdalaYoung AdultPicture viewingmedicineHuman PerformancePsychophysicsHumansPsychologyMotor activityValence (psychology)lcsh:Scienceta515BehaviorMotivationMultidisciplinarymedicine.diagnostic_testBlinkinglcsh:RCognitive PsychologyExperimental PsychologyEmotional modulationmedicine.anatomical_structurelcsh:QFemaleSensory PerceptionPsychologyAttention (Behavior)Photic StimulationMotor cortexCognitive psychologyResearch ArticlePLOS ONE
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Factors limiting performance in a multitone intensity-discrimination task: disentangling non-optimal decision weights and increased internal noise.

2013

To identify factors limiting performance in multitone intensity discrimination, we presented sequences of five pure tones alternating in level between loud (85 dB SPL) and soft (30, 55, or 80 dB SPL). In the "overall-intensity task", listeners detected a level increment on all of the five tones. In the "masking task", the level increment was imposed only on the soft tones, rendering the soft tones targets and loud tones task-irrelevant maskers. Decision weights quantifying the importance of the five tone levels for the decision were estimated using methods of molecular psychophysics. Compatible with previous studies, listeners placed higher weights on the loud tones than on the soft tones i…

AdultMaleScienceSocial and Behavioral SciencesYoung AdultPsychophysicsPsychologyHumansStatistical MethodsBiologyBehaviorLikelihood FunctionsPhysicsStatisticsQRClassical MechanicsExperimental PsychologyAcousticsModels TheoreticalSensory SystemsAuditory System150 PsychologieAuditory PerceptionMedicineSensory PerceptionFemaleAttention (Behavior)Noise150 PsychologyPerceptual MaskingMathematicsResearch ArticleNeurosciencePsychoacousticsPLoS ONE
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Dependence of Perceived Purity of a Chromatic Stimulus on Saturation Adaptation

2012

Background and Objective. The purpose of sensory adaptation of the visual system is to adjust sensitivity of the photoreceptors to optimize the dynamic range of response of the visual system. It has been shown in numerous research papers that chromatic adaptation influences both color appearance and color discrimination. However, there are almost no studies in which the influence of chromatic adaptation on perceived purity has been investigated. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate how chromatic adaptation to stimuli with certain saturation influences perceived purity of test stimuli with the same hue but different saturation. Material and Methods. As the stimuli were modulat…

AdultMaleSensory Adaptationgenetic structuresAdaptation Ocularbusiness.industrychromatic adaptation; color saturation; color purity; perceptual nonlinearityColorGeneral MedicineMiddle AgedStimulus (physiology)Young AdultChromatic adaptationColor purityPsychophysicsHumansMedicineFemaleChromatic scaleAbney effectBiological systembusinessColor PerceptionPhotic StimulationHueMedicina; Volume 48; Issue 9; Pages: 68
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Contour integration with corners.

2016

Contour integration refers to the ability of the visual system to bind disjoint local elements into coherent global shapes. In cluttered images containing randomly oriented elements a contour becomes salient when its elements are coaligned with a smooth global trajectory, as described by the Gestalt law of good continuation. Abrupt changes of curvature strongly diminish contour salience. Here we show that by inserting local corner elements at points of angular discontinuity, a jagged contour becomes as salient as a straight one. We report results from detection experiments for contours with and without corner elements which indicate their psychophysical equivalence. This presents a challeng…

AdultMaleSpatial visionComputer scienceDisjoint setsCurvature050105 experimental psychology03 medical and health sciencesYoung Adult0302 clinical medicineSalience (neuroscience)OrientationPsychophysicsPsychophysicsHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesComputer visionCommunicationAnalysis of Variancebusiness.industry05 social sciencesMethods of contour integrationSensory SystemsForm PerceptionOphthalmologyPattern Recognition VisualSalientSpace PerceptionGestalt psychologyFemaleArtificial intelligencebusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryPhotic StimulationVision research
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Psychophysics, flare, and neurosecretory function in human pain models: capsaicin versus electrically evoked pain.

2007

Intradermal capsaicin injection (CAP) and electrical current stimulation (ES) are analyzed in respect to patterns and test-retest reliability of pain as well as sensory and neurosecretory changes. In 10 healthy subjects, 2 CAP (50 g) and 2 ES (5 to 30 mA) were applied to the volar forearm. The time period between 2 identical stimulations was about 4 months. Pain ratings, areas of mechanical hyperalgesia, and allodynia were assessed. The intensity of sensory changes was quantified by using quantitative sensory testing. Neurogenic flare was assessed by using laser Doppler imaging. Calcito- nin gene-related peptide (CGRP) release was quantified by dermal microdialysis in combination with an en…

AdultMaleTime FactorsSensory Receptor CellsCalcitonin Gene-Related PeptideModels NeurologicalPainStimulationSensory systemCalcitonin gene-related peptidechemistry.chemical_compoundmedicineNoxious stimulusLaser-Doppler FlowmetryPsychophysicsHumansPain MeasurementSkinNerve Fibers UnmyelinatedNeuronal Plasticitybusiness.industryNociceptorsMiddle AgedNeurosecretory SystemsElectric StimulationPeripheralAnesthesiology and Pain MedicineAllodyniaNeurologychemistryCapsaicinHyperalgesiaRegional Blood FlowAnesthesiaHyperalgesiaFemaleNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptomCapsaicinInflammation MediatorsbusinessThe journal of pain
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Measuring Perceived Ceiling Height in a Visual Comparison Task

2017

When judging interior space, a dark ceiling is judged to be lower than a light ceiling. The method of metric judgments (e.g., on a centimetre scale) that has typically been used in such tasks may reflect a genuine perceptual effect or it may reflect a cognitively mediated impression. We employed a height-matching method in which perceived ceiling height had to be matched with an adjustable pillar, thus obtaining psychometric functions that allowed for an estimation of the point of subjective equality (PSE) and the difference limen (DL). The height-matching method developed in this paper allows for a direct visual match and does not require metric judgment. It has the added advantage of pro…

AdultMaleVisual perceptionAdolescentPsychometricsScale (ratio)Physiology050109 social psychologyExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyCeiling (cloud)050105 experimental psychologyTask (project management)JudgmentYoung AdultPhysiology (medical)PsychophysicsPsychophysicsHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesComputer visionGeneral PsychologyAnalysis of VarianceCommunicationbusiness.industryDistance Perception05 social sciencesVisual comparisonGeneral MedicineMiddle AgedNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologySpace PerceptionMetric (mathematics)FemaleArtificial intelligenceInterior spacebusinessPsychologyPhotic StimulationQuarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology
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Timing flickers across sensory modalities

2009

In tasks requiring a comparison of the duration of a reference and a test visual cue, the spatial position of test cue is likely to be implicitly coded, providing a form of a congruency effect or introducing a response bias according to the environmental scale or its vectorial reference. The precise mechanism generating these perceptual shifts in subjective duration is not understood, although several studies suggest that spatial attentional factors may play a critical role. Here we use a duration comparison task within and across sensory modalities to examine if temporal performance is also modulated when people are exposed to spatial distractors involving different sensory modalities. Di…

AdultMaleVisual perceptionTime Factorsgenetic structuresAdolescentmedia_common.quotation_subjectExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyAcoustic Stimulation; Adolescent; Adult; Attention; Auditory Perception; Cues; Female; Humans; Male; Photic Stimulation; Psychophysics; Space Perception; Time Factors; Time Perception; Young Adult; Experimental and Cognitive Psychology; Sensory Systems; Artificial Intelligencebehavioral disciplines and activitiesTask (project management)Young AdultStimulus modalityArtificial IntelligencePerceptionPsychophysicsPsychophysicsHumansAttentionmedia_commonTiming flickers across sensory modalitiesResponse biasSensory SystemsOphthalmologyAcoustic StimulationDuration (music)Space PerceptionTime PerceptionAuditory stimuliAuditory PerceptionFemaleCuesPsychologypsychological phenomena and processesPhotic StimulationCognitive psychology
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Inhibitory interhemispheric visuovisual interaction in motion perception.

2003

Findings of an earlier functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study that coherent motion stimulation of the right or left visual hemifield exhibited negative signal changes (deactivations) in the primary visual cortex and the lateral geniculate nucleus contralateral to the stimulated hemisphere were evaluated to determine the functional significance of this contralateral inhibition of the visual system. Fourteen subjects participated in a psychophysical study on the perception of single object motion (0.4 degrees /s) in one visual hemifield with or without concurrent coherent motion stimulation of the contralateral hemifield. Mean detection times for horizontal object motion (0.5 +/- …

AdultMalegenetic structuresMotion PerceptionStimulationLateral geniculate nucleusGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyHistory and Philosophy of SciencemedicinePsychophysicsPsychophysicsPremovement neuronal activityHumansMotion perceptionVisual Cortexmedicine.diagnostic_testGeneral NeuroscienceGeniculate BodiesMagnetic resonance imagingMiddle AgedMagnetic Resonance ImagingVisual cortexmedicine.anatomical_structureFemalePsychologyFunctional magnetic resonance imagingNeuroscienceCognitive psychologyAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences
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Amplitude envelope correlation detects coupling among incoherent brain signals.

2000

Event-related potentials (ERPs) to changes in the visual environment were recorded in rabbits. In the oddball condition, infrequently presented (deviant) stimuli occurred in a series of frequently presented (standard) stimuli. In the deviant-alone condition, standards were omitted. ERPs to oddball-deviants differed from those to standards in all recording sites (cerebellar cortex, visual cortex, dentate gyrus). No corresponding differences were found between ERPs to deviants in the oddball condition and those in the deviant-alone condition. However, because ERPs to deviants in the deviant-alone condition and those to standards did not differ either, ERPs to stimulus changes in the oddball c…

AdultMalegenetic structureseducationHippocampusMismatch negativityStimulus (physiology)Electroencephalographybehavioral disciplines and activitiesCognitionEvent-related potentialmental disordersmedicinePsychophysicsHumansCortical SynchronizationVisual Cortexmedicine.diagnostic_testGeneral NeuroscienceReproducibility of ResultsElectrophysiologyVisual cortexmedicine.anatomical_structureCerebellar cortexFemalePsychologyNeurosciencepsychological phenomena and processesPhotic StimulationNeuroreport
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Botulinum Toxin A reduces neurogenic flare but has almost no effect on pain and hyperalgesia in human skin.

2003

Botulinum toxin A (BoNT/A) has been used therapeutically to treat muscular hypercontractions and sudomotor hyperactivity. There is increasing evidence that BoNT/A might also have analgesic properties, in particular in headache. In the present investigation we tested the often cited hypothesis that BoNT/A-induced analgesia can be attributed to inhibition of neuropeptide release from nociceptive nerve fibers. In 15 healthy volunteers BoNT/A (5, 10, 20 mouse units BOTOX) or saline (contralateral side) was injected intracutaneously on the volar forearm. On day zero, the day of injection, no further tests were performed. We repeatedly elicited pain, mechanical hyperalgesia and neurogenic flare b…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyNeurologyAnalgesicNeuropeptidePainStimulationNerve FibersPsychophysicsMedicineHumansBotulinum Toxins Type APain MeasurementSkinHypohidrosisNeurogenic inflammationbusiness.industryNociceptorsAxonsElectric StimulationSudomotorNociceptionNeurologyHyperalgesiaAnesthesiaHyperalgesiaFemaleNeurology (clinical)medicine.symptomNeurogenic InflammationbusinessJournal of neurology
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