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1.
Perception ; 42(3): 358-61, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23837212

ABSTRACT

This article introduces a new visual illusion. A thick line induces boldface appearance to adjacent letters or geometric figures. This boldface illusion suggests that visual features assimilate in terms of thickness.


Subject(s)
Attention , Optical Illusions , Pattern Recognition, Visual , Reading , Discrimination, Psychological , Humans , Psychophysics , Size Perception
2.
Appl Ergon ; 40(6): 1047-54, 2009 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19541291

ABSTRACT

We used psychophysiological technology to examine the effect of an oral supplement, a combination of lutein, zeaxanthin and blackcurrant extract (LUT), on visual fatigue, within the context of a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled cross-over trial. The LUT supplement and placebo samples were randomly assigned to thirteen participants, who took the samples for two LUT (and vice versa) for another 2 week. Each participant completed visual proof reading tasks for 2h during each of four testing sessions. Saccade tests were administered before and after the proof reading task, during which the participants moved their eyes back and forth between two targets positioned in the center of two checkerboards. We recorded EEG, EOG, heart rate, and facial muscle potential/performance during the saccade tests. Blood pressure was measured and subjective fatigue and stress scores were collected before and after the proof reading task. We averaged EEG starting at saccade offset in order to analyze eye fixation related potentials (EFRP). Our results suggested that the proof reading task induced visual fatigue. An analysis of EFRP and other psychophysiological data revealed significant differences between the LUT and placebo conditions. These results suggest that supplementation with LUT could help to reduce symptoms of visual fatigue.


Subject(s)
Attention/drug effects , Dietary Supplements , Eye Movements/drug effects , Fatigue/prevention & control , Lutein/therapeutic use , Vision, Ocular/drug effects , Wakefulness/drug effects , Adult , Double-Blind Method , Evoked Potentials, Visual/drug effects , Female , Heart Rate , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Perception/drug effects , Psychometrics , Reading , Ribes , Vision Tests , Xanthophylls/therapeutic use , Zeaxanthins
3.
Vision Res ; 49(7): 759-64, 2009 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19236893

ABSTRACT

When a walking person is presented in a movie, the background image appears to move in a direction opposite to that of the person's locomotion. This study aimed to quantify the strength of this backscroll illusion and to examine interobserver and intraobserver variability. Stimuli were movie clips that presented a walking person in profile against a background of dynamic grating composed of two vertical sinusoidal gratings moving in opposite directions. Employing a motion-nulling method, we controlled the ratio of luminance contrasts of the component gratings to determine points that canceled the percept of unidirectional motion in the grating background. Results across 50 observers showed that the backscroll illusion disappeared when a luminance contrast of moving grating components consistent with a walker's direction was about twice as high as that for the opposite motion direction. Intraobserver variability was relatively small. However, nulling points for individual observers were more variable under conditions with dynamically moving walkers than conditions presenting only a static picture of a walker. We speculated on the underlying mechanisms of the backscroll illusion in relation to similar phenomena.


Subject(s)
Motion Perception/physiology , Optical Illusions/physiology , Adult , Humans , Motion Pictures , Observer Variation , Photic Stimulation/methods , Psychometrics , Walking , Young Adult
4.
Perception ; 37(12): 1783-9, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19227372

ABSTRACT

When a movie presents a person walking, the background appears to move in the direction opposite to the person's gait. This study verified this backscroll illusion by presenting a point-light walker against a background of a random-dot cinematogram (RDC). The RDC consisted of some signal dots moving coherently either leftward or rightward among other noise dots moving randomly. The method of constant stimuli was used to vary the RDC in motion coherence from trial to trial by manipulating the direction and percentage of the signal dots. Six observers judged the perceived direction of coherent motion in a two-alternative forced-choice procedure. Response rates for coherent motion perception in the direction opposite to walking were evaluated as a function of motion coherence. The results showed that the psychometric function shifted toward the direction determined by a bias in the opposite direction to the walker. The mean threshold was about half as high as that in a control condition in which the positions of the point-lights were scrambled to impair the recognition of the walker. The results demonstrate that biological motion noticeably affects the appearance of motion coherence in the background.


Subject(s)
Motion Perception/physiology , Optical Illusions/physiology , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Pattern Recognition, Visual/physiology , Photic Stimulation/methods , Psychometrics , Psychophysics , Walking , Young Adult
5.
J Vis ; 7(8): 16, 2007 Jun 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17685823

ABSTRACT

The backscroll illusion refers to the apparent motion perceived in the background of a movie image that presents a locomotive object such as a person, an animal, or a vehicle. Here, we report that the backscroll illusion can occur in far peripheral visual fields at retinal eccentricity of more than 30 degrees. In psychological experiments, we presented a walking person in profile against an ambiguously moving background of vertical counterphase grating. This stimulus, which subtended 30 degrees of visual angle in width and height, was projected onto a hemispheric screen and positioned at horizontal eccentricity between 0 degrees and 50 degrees at intervals of 10 degrees. The eccentricity was changed randomly trial by trial, and stimulus duration was as short as 350 ms so that observers could not effectively move their eyes to the stimulus. Six observers viewed the stimulus either monocularly or binocularly and reported their perceptual impression for the grating in a three-alternative forced-choice procedure: drifting left, drifting right, or flickering. Results showed that the grating appeared to move in the opposite direction of walking at high probabilities even in the far periphery. Additional experiments confirmed that walking action could be recognized from the far peripheral stimulation. Our findings suggest that the visual system uses high-level object-centered motion signals to disambiguate retinal motion signals in the whole visual field.


Subject(s)
Figural Aftereffect , Motion Perception , Optical Illusions , Visual Fields , Adult , Figural Aftereffect/physiology , Humans , Motion Perception/physiology , Photic Stimulation/methods , Psychophysics , Retina/physiology , Vision, Binocular/physiology , Vision, Monocular/physiology
6.
Epilepsia ; 48(6): 1133-7, 2007 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17441990

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The incidence of status epilepticus (SE) in Asian children, including Japanese, has not been reported. METHODS: In 2003, we performed an epidemiological study of SE on Japanese children (31 days or older to <15 years of age) in Okayama City by ascertaining all lifetime first episodes of SE. RESULTS: Thirty-seven patients (22 males and 15 females) were identified. The annual incidence of SE was 38.8 per 100,000 population (95% CI: 24.5-49.5). Febrile SE in the absence of CNS infection accounted for 17. Acute symptomatic etiologies other than febrile SE were observed in eight patients, including three cases of influenza encephalitis/encephalopathy. Five were classified as remote symptomatic and the remaining seven as cryptogenic. The highest incidence (155.1/100,000) was seen in the age range of 31 days or older to <1 year, followed by 101.5/100,000 in the age range of one year, and the incidence decreased after eight years. In 26 of the 37 patients, SE was their first seizure. As for seizure types, 32 had convulsive SE, including tonic status in one. Five others showed nonconvulsive SE, including complex partial SE in four and absence status in one. No one died of SE. Two patients who brought on SE because of influenza encephalitis/encephalopathy suffered from motor disturbance with or without mental disturbance after SE. CONCLUSIONS: The incidence of SE tended to be higher in Japanese children than reported in Caucasians. The Japanese had an age-specific incidence pattern similar to that of Caucasians.


Subject(s)
Status Epilepticus/epidemiology , Adolescent , Age Factors , Asian People/statistics & numerical data , Child , Child, Preschool , Epilepsy/epidemiology , Epilepsy, Absence/epidemiology , Female , Humans , Incidence , Infant , Japan/epidemiology , Male , Seizures, Febrile/epidemiology , White People/statistics & numerical data
7.
Vision Res ; 46(1-2): 14-25, 2006 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16289275

ABSTRACT

Backscroll illusion is an apparent motion perceived in backgrounds of movie images that present locomotive objects such as people, animals, and vehicles. This illusion is from the visual system registering retinal motion signals in relation to high-level object motion signals. We confirmed this notion from psychophysical experiments that mainly presented a realistic human figure on a treadmill walking or running in front of a counterphase grating. The apparent grating motion was consistently induced in the direction opposite to the locomotion. The induction was tuned to a gait velocity. The time course showed that the illusion arose as if it was synchronized with gait recognition, and that it was sustained against several reversals of limb swings so that local motion accounts were denied. A weak but significant illusion was observed from a static figure that implied a gait. Thus, we concluded that the illusion was determined by the high-level recognition of biological motion. An additional experiment found a similar effect from a vehicle with rotating wheels but no induction from a rotating wheel per se. This result led us to hypothesize that the backscroll illusion is generalized to objects that have shapes implying their moving directions.


Subject(s)
Motion Perception , Optical Illusions , Adult , Figural Aftereffect , Form Perception , Gait , Humans , Photic Stimulation/methods , Psychophysics
8.
Hear Res ; 208(1-2): 107-13, 2005 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16019175

ABSTRACT

Ultrasound can be perceived through bone conduction by the profoundly deaf as well as by normal-hearing subjects. Moreover, speech signals modulated onto ultrasound can be detected through bone conduction. This study explored how well listeners can understand ultrasonic speech and the confusion patterns to evaluate and improve bone-conducted ultrasonic hearing. The intelligibility of Japanese words classified by familiarity and Japanese monosyllables with bone-conducted ultrasound was investigated. Results showed that the intelligibility of familiar words was higher than that of unfamiliar words. Further, the results of a monosyllable intelligibility test with bone-conducted ultrasound and those of a test with air-conducted sound showed a similar pattern of speech recognition with regard to the errors made. The relationship between speech intelligibility and sound level showed that the increase in the intelligibility of bone-conducted ultrasonic speech did not exceed the increase in the intelligibility of air-conducted speech as the sound level rose.


Subject(s)
Bone Conduction , Hearing Aids , Speech Intelligibility , Adult , Air , Humans , Japan , Ultrasonics
9.
Hear Res ; 204(1-2): 210-5, 2005 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15925206

ABSTRACT

Human listeners can perceive speech from a voice-modulated ultrasonic carrier presented via a bone-conduction stimulator. This study explored the psychoacoustic characteristics and underlying mechanisms of ultrasonic hearing by measuring difference limens for frequency (DLF) for pure tones modulated onto ultrasonic carriers. Human subjects were presented with two pulsed tones and asked to judge whether the first or the second had the higher pitch. When amplitude modulation was based on a double side-band transmitted carrier, the DLFs were as small as those from the air-conducted pure tones at 0.25-4 kHz. Ultrasounds yielded larger DLFs for tones with low (0.125 kHz) and high (6-8 kHz) frequencies. Results were essentially identical between the two types of carriers, sine wave (30 kHz) and bandpass noise (30+/-4 kHz), despite the different bandwidths in the ultrasonic range. When amplitude modulation was based on a double side-band suppressed carrier, DLFs corresponded to those from tones with double frequencies. These results suggest nonlinear conduction that demodulates audible signals from ultrasounds and provides inputs to the cochlea.


Subject(s)
Bone Conduction/physiology , Pitch Perception/physiology , Ultrasonics , Acoustic Stimulation , Adult , Audiometry, Pure-Tone , Auditory Threshold , Differential Threshold/physiology , Humans , Nonlinear Dynamics , Psychoacoustics
10.
Physiol Plant ; 117(3): 376-382, 2003 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12654038

ABSTRACT

To investigate the adaptive capacity to strong light among mangrove species, we examined light-dependent properties of photosynthesis in relation to photoinhibition using chlorophyll fluorescence for sun-leaves of five mangrove tree species; Sonneratia alba, Rhizophora stylosa, Rhizophora apiculata, Bruguiera gymnorrhiza and Xylocarpus granatum. These species were classified into three groups; pioneer -S. alba and R. stylosa, intermediate -R. apiculata and B. gymnorrhiza and climax species -X. granatum. A further distinction can be made between the two intermediate species, the less shade-tolerant R. apiculata and the shade-tolerant B. gymnorrhiza. There was a clear association between successional status and light-saturated electron transport rate (ETR) where ETR was higher in S. alba and R. stylosa > R. apiculata and B. gymnorrhiza > X. granatum. Based on its lower initial slope of light-dependent ETR and lower ratio of variable to maximum fluorescence (Fv/Fm) after a dark-adaptation, X. granatum appeared to suffer greater photoinhibition than other species. The response of qP, which represents PSII openness, to incident light indicates a ranking of tolerant capacity to photoinhibition of S. alba and R. stylosa > R. apiculata > B. gymnorrhiza and X. granatum. The difference in qP response between R. apiculata and B. gymnorrhiza might be attributed to the higher leaf absorptance and the lower degree of thermal dissipation indicated by the higher F'v/F'm in B. gymnorrhiza. It appears that the co-ordination of leaf absorptance, thermal dissipation and consumption of absorbed light energy through electron transport is important in the acclimation of mangrove species to exposed habitats.

11.
Perception ; 32(10): 1273-7, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14700261

ABSTRACT

A new type of motion illusion is described in which ambiguous motion becomes unidirectional on superimposition of a human figure walking on a treadmill. A point-light walker in profile was superimposed on a vertical counterphase grating backdrop. Eleven naïve observers judged the apparent direction of motion against the grating as left or right in a two-alternative forced-choice task and found that the grating appeared to drift in a direction opposite to the walking. The illusion disappeared when the point lights moved in scrambled configurations. This indicates that the illusion is caused by biological motion that provides recognition of gaits. A human figure walking backwards produced no illusion because of the difficulty in identifying the gait. This indicates that the illusion is determined by translational motion rather than form represented from biological motion.


Subject(s)
Motion Perception/physiology , Optical Illusions , Adult , Humans , Movement , Psychophysics
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