Orientation discrimination in 5-year-olds and adults tested with luminance-modulated and contrast-modulated gratings
Author(s) -
T. L. Lewis,
Andrew Kingdon,
Dave Ellemberg,
Daphne Maurer
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
journal of vision
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.126
H-Index - 113
ISSN - 1534-7362
DOI - 10.1167/7.4.9
Subject(s) - contrast (vision) , luminance , orientation (vector space) , modulation (music) , tilt (camera) , visibility , optics , psychology , spatial frequency , audiology , amplitude , mathematics , physics , acoustics , medicine , geometry
We compared thresholds for discriminating orientation by 5-year-olds and adults for first-order (luminance-modulated) and second-order (contrast-modulated) gratings. To achieve equal visibility, we set the contrast for each age and condition at a fixed multiple of the contrast threshold for discriminating horizontal from vertical gratings. The minimum tilt that could be discriminated from vertical was four to five times larger in 5-year-olds than in adults, even when the noise was removed from the first-order stimuli and amplitude modulation increased to 0.90. Thresholds at both ages were significantly worse (1.2-1.5 times worse) for second-order modulation than for equally visible first-order modulation, and 5-year-olds were equally immature for both types of pattern. Together, the findings suggest that orientation discrimination is slow to develop and worse for second-order than first-order patterns in both children and adults.
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