Simultaneous Regularity Contrast and Luminance Polarity

Texture regularity, for example, the repeating pattern of a carpet, brickwork, or tree bark, is a ubiquitous feature of the visual world. The perception of regularity has generally been studied using multi-element textures whose regularity is manipulated by the addition of random jitter to the eleme...

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Main Authors: Frederick A. A. Kingdom, Hua-Chun Sun, Elena Gheorghiu, Martin S. Silva
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-03-01
Series:Vision
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Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2411-5150/9/1/23
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author Frederick A. A. Kingdom
Hua-Chun Sun
Elena Gheorghiu
Martin S. Silva
author_facet Frederick A. A. Kingdom
Hua-Chun Sun
Elena Gheorghiu
Martin S. Silva
author_sort Frederick A. A. Kingdom
collection DOAJ
description Texture regularity, for example, the repeating pattern of a carpet, brickwork, or tree bark, is a ubiquitous feature of the visual world. The perception of regularity has generally been studied using multi-element textures whose regularity is manipulated by the addition of random jitter to the elements’ nominal positions. Here, we investigate the selectivity of regularity perception for the luminance contrast polarities of the elements. Our psychophysical tool was simultaneous regularity contrast, or SRC, the phenomenon in which the perceived regularity of a central test texture is shifted away from that of the surrounding regularity. Stimuli were composed of arrays of dark and/or white Gaussian elements. Surround and center test textures consisted of either the same (“congruent”) or opposite (“incongruent”) polarities. In addition, we tested a “mixed” condition consisting of a random mixture of polarities in both the surround and test. The perceived regularity of the test was measured using a match stimulus with the same polarity dimension as the test. The regularity of the match stimulus was adjusted on each trial using a forced-choice staircase procedure and the point-of-subjective equality between the match and test regularities was estimated from the resulting psychometric functions. SRC was observed in both congruent and incongruent conditions, but with the mixed condition, the perceived regularity of the test was shifted toward rather than away from the surround regularity, an example of assimilation, not contrast. The analysis revealed no significant difference in the magnitude of SRC between the congruent and incongruent conditions, suggesting that SRC could be mediated solely by polarity agnostic mechanisms, although there are other possible explanations for the “null” result. However, trend analysis using a non-linear (sigmoidal-shaped) function indicated a significant difference between the congruent and incongruent conditions, which, together with the mixed polarity results, suggests the presence of at least some polarity selective mechanisms. Previous reports have suggested that regularity perception is encoded by the “peakedness” in the distribution of spatial-frequency-tuned linear filter responses. We modelled SRC quantitatively by incorporating peakedness with spatial-frequency-selective surround inhibition and found that the model gave a good account of the SRC data. Possible reasons for the assimilation effect—with the mixed polarity condition are discussed.
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spelling doaj-art-9cac310bf4a34d4bacc3e8825e7a5dcb2025-08-20T02:43:10ZengMDPI AGVision2411-51502025-03-01912310.3390/vision9010023Simultaneous Regularity Contrast and Luminance PolarityFrederick A. A. Kingdom0Hua-Chun Sun1Elena Gheorghiu2Martin S. Silva3McGill Vision Research, Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, Montreal General Hospital, Montreal, QC H3G 1A4, CanadaDepartment of Psychology, Justus Liebig University, 35394 Giessen, GermanyDepartment of Psychology, University of Stirling, Stirling FK9 4LA, UKMcGill Vision Research, Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, Montreal General Hospital, Montreal, QC H3G 1A4, CanadaTexture regularity, for example, the repeating pattern of a carpet, brickwork, or tree bark, is a ubiquitous feature of the visual world. The perception of regularity has generally been studied using multi-element textures whose regularity is manipulated by the addition of random jitter to the elements’ nominal positions. Here, we investigate the selectivity of regularity perception for the luminance contrast polarities of the elements. Our psychophysical tool was simultaneous regularity contrast, or SRC, the phenomenon in which the perceived regularity of a central test texture is shifted away from that of the surrounding regularity. Stimuli were composed of arrays of dark and/or white Gaussian elements. Surround and center test textures consisted of either the same (“congruent”) or opposite (“incongruent”) polarities. In addition, we tested a “mixed” condition consisting of a random mixture of polarities in both the surround and test. The perceived regularity of the test was measured using a match stimulus with the same polarity dimension as the test. The regularity of the match stimulus was adjusted on each trial using a forced-choice staircase procedure and the point-of-subjective equality between the match and test regularities was estimated from the resulting psychometric functions. SRC was observed in both congruent and incongruent conditions, but with the mixed condition, the perceived regularity of the test was shifted toward rather than away from the surround regularity, an example of assimilation, not contrast. The analysis revealed no significant difference in the magnitude of SRC between the congruent and incongruent conditions, suggesting that SRC could be mediated solely by polarity agnostic mechanisms, although there are other possible explanations for the “null” result. However, trend analysis using a non-linear (sigmoidal-shaped) function indicated a significant difference between the congruent and incongruent conditions, which, together with the mixed polarity results, suggests the presence of at least some polarity selective mechanisms. Previous reports have suggested that regularity perception is encoded by the “peakedness” in the distribution of spatial-frequency-tuned linear filter responses. We modelled SRC quantitatively by incorporating peakedness with spatial-frequency-selective surround inhibition and found that the model gave a good account of the SRC data. Possible reasons for the assimilation effect—with the mixed polarity condition are discussed.https://www.mdpi.com/2411-5150/9/1/23textureregularitysurround contrastassimilationluminance polarityspatial frequency
spellingShingle Frederick A. A. Kingdom
Hua-Chun Sun
Elena Gheorghiu
Martin S. Silva
Simultaneous Regularity Contrast and Luminance Polarity
Vision
texture
regularity
surround contrast
assimilation
luminance polarity
spatial frequency
title Simultaneous Regularity Contrast and Luminance Polarity
title_full Simultaneous Regularity Contrast and Luminance Polarity
title_fullStr Simultaneous Regularity Contrast and Luminance Polarity
title_full_unstemmed Simultaneous Regularity Contrast and Luminance Polarity
title_short Simultaneous Regularity Contrast and Luminance Polarity
title_sort simultaneous regularity contrast and luminance polarity
topic texture
regularity
surround contrast
assimilation
luminance polarity
spatial frequency
url https://www.mdpi.com/2411-5150/9/1/23
work_keys_str_mv AT frederickaakingdom simultaneousregularitycontrastandluminancepolarity
AT huachunsun simultaneousregularitycontrastandluminancepolarity
AT elenagheorghiu simultaneousregularitycontrastandluminancepolarity
AT martinssilva simultaneousregularitycontrastandluminancepolarity