Journal article

Foveal and parafoveal contrast suppression are different: Mechanisms revealed by the study of healthy aging

BN Nguyen, AM McKendrick

Journal of Vision | Published : 2016

Abstract

Visual contextual effects enable inference regarding neural mechanisms of cortical function, principally because of similarities between the stimulus properties influencing human perception and those modifying primate visual cortical neural responses. Most neurophysiology assesses nonfoveal cellular function and circuitry, while most human studies are foveal. Here we use parafoveal stimuli to measure center-surround perception of contrast in older and younger adults. We measure the influence of both near and far surround because neurophysiology demonstrates different circuitry for these areas. Contrast suppression from the near surround was reduced in older observers, while that from the far..

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University of Melbourne Researchers