The symmetry detection mechanisms are color selective

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Abstract

We investigated the role of color in the feature integration process for global form perception. For this, we used a 2AFC noise masking paradigm to measure the color selectivity of the symmetry detection mechanism. In each trial, a vertical symmetric target was randomly presented in one of the two intervals while a random dot control, in the other. The observers' task was to determine which interval contained the symmetric target. The image elements varied in chromaticity. The target density threshold was measured at various combinations of target and mask chromaticity. A noise mask with the same chromaticity as the target always produced the largest masking effect (threshold increment) on the detection on that target. The masking effect decreased as the difference in chromaticity between the target and mask increased. This suggests that the symmetry detection mechanisms are color selective and only extract local image features of a specific chromaticity.

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Wu, C. C., & Chen, C. C. (2014). The symmetry detection mechanisms are color selective. Scientific Reports, 4. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep03893

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