Crowding is unlike ordinary masking: Distinguishing feature integration from detection
Indexed incrossrefdoajpubmed
Abstract
A letter in the peripheral visual field is much harder to identify in the presence of nearby letters. This is "crowding." Both crowding and ordinary masking are special cases of "masking," which, in general, refers to any effect of a "mask" pattern on the discriminability of a signal. Here we characterize crowding, and propose a diagnostic test to distinguish it from ordinary masking. In ordinary masking, the signal disappears. In crowding, it remains visible, but is ambiguous, jumbled with its neighbors. Masks are usually effective only if they overlap the signal, but the crowding effect extends over a large region. The width of that region is proportional to signal eccentricity from the fovea and independent…
Citation impact
830
total citations
- FWCI
- 10.71
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 259
Citations per year
Authors
3Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Crowding
- Masking (illustration)
- Contrast (vision)
- Eccentricity (behavior)
- Peripheral vision
- SIGNAL (programming language)
- Optics
- Detection threshold
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Reduced inequalities
No related works found for this paper.