PLoS ONE (Feb 2007)

The lingering effects of an artificial blind spot.

  • Michael J Morgan,
  • William McEwan,
  • Joshua Solomon

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0000256
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 2
p. e256

Abstract

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When steady fixation is maintained on the centre of a large patch of texture, holes in the periphery of the texture rapidly fade from awareness, producing artificial scotomata (i.e., invisible areas of reduced vision, like the natural 'blind spot'). There has been considerable controversy about whether this apparent 'filling in' depends on a low-level or high-level visual process. Evidence for an active process is that when the texture around the scotomata is suddenly removed, phantasms of the texture appear within the previous scotomata.To see if these phantasms were equivalent to real low-level signals, we measured contrast discrimination for real dynamic texture patches presented on top of the phantasms.Phantasm intensity varied with adapting contrast. Contrast discrimination depended on both (real) pedestal contrast and phantasm intensity, in a manner indicative of a common sensory threshold. The phantasms showed inter-ocular transfer, proving that their effects are cortical rather than retinal.We show that this effect is consistent with a tonic spreading of the adapting texture into the scotomata, coupled with some overall loss of sensitivity. Our results support the view that 'filling in' happens at an early stage of visual processing, quite possibly in primary visual cortex (V1).