Perception of oppositely moving verniers
and spatio-temporal interpolation
Manfred Fahle
Abstract
Even at moderate speeds, moving objects stimulate many retinal photoreceptors
within the integration time of the receptors, yet usually no motion blur
is experienced. An elegant model for the elimination of motion blur was
proposed by Anderson and van Essen (1987). These authors suggested that
so-called shifter circuits shift the neuronal representation of retinal
images on their way to the cortex. The retinal image of an object moving
in the outer world is thus shifted in the opposite direction to the object
motion, and the cortical representation of objects would be stable at least
during short periods of time. To test the hypothesis of 'shifter circuits',
I measured thresholds for two vernier stimuli, moving simultaneously into
opposite directions over identical parts of the retina. Motion blur for
these stimuli was not stronger than with a single moving stimulus, and thresholds
for the detection of vernier offsets could be below a photoreceptor diameter.
This finding poses serious problems for the hypothesis of 'shifter circuits',
since shifter circuits would be able to stabilize only one of the stimuli.
In additional experiments, stimuli moved discontinuously, requiring spatio-temporal
interpolation for the perception of smooth motion. The results are consistent
with those obtained with continuous motion. Precision of spatio-temporal
interpolation was in the hyperacuity range even for stimuli moving into
opposite directions over the same small part of the visual field.