Visual Memory for Vernier Offsets
M. Fahle and J. P. Harris
Human ability to perceive and remember precise spatial relationships was
investigated in a vernier acuity task. An initial ("standard")
vernier stimulus with a variable offset was presented for l00 msec. After
a delay of 1, 4, or 8 sec, another vernier target (the "variable"
stimulus) followed, also for 100 msec. Observers compared the offsets of
the two stimuli with each other. For very small offsets, discrimination
between smaller and larger offsets was very precise, in the hyperacuity
range. Thresholds increased linearly with the spatial offset of the standard
stimulus, suggesting that the precision of the mechanism solving this spatial
task scales with offset size. Control experiments suggested that this effect
was not due to variations in retinal eccentricity. Thresholds also increased
with increasing delay between the presentations of the two stimuli. By varying
the delay, we directly measured the fading of the spatial memory trace.