When a small area that has a different texture from its surroundings is presented to a subject's peripheral vision, that person perceives that the area is filled by its surrounding texture. It disappears within a few seconds under certain circumstances. This illusion is called filling-in. The filling-in time depends on textural properties, the area's size, the eccentricity with which the small area is projected, and so on. Filling-in characteristics must be elucidated to understand the mode of information processing in human vision because filling-in has been considered to contribute greatly to capturing external visual information. Facilitation of filling-in is generally evaluated using the filling-in time. Furthermore, it is well-known that we can see nothing by restraining eye movement artificially. Eye movement is important to acquire visual information. Therefore, we can suppose that facilitation of filling-in is influenced by eye movement. Although it has been recently indicated that eye movement influences the filling-in time while measuring time to filling-in, the relationship between eye movement and the filling-in time has rarely been reported. In this study, we measured the filling-in time, with simultaneous recording of eye movement. Results showed that the filling-in time correlates moderately or weakly with eye movement, under the condition that complete fixation is achieved.
[1]
M. Yokota,et al.
Facilitation of perceptual filling-in for spatio-temporal frequency of dynamic textures
,
2005,
2005 IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology 27th Annual Conference.
[2]
R. L. Gregory,et al.
Perceptual fading of visual texture borders
,
1993,
Vision Research.
[3]
Yutaka Sakaguchi.
PII: S0042-6989(01)00095-5
,
2001
.
[4]
Lothar Spillmann,et al.
Dynamic noise backgrounds facilitate target fading
,
1992,
Vision Research.
[5]
Lothar Spillmann,et al.
Texture fading correlates with stimulus salience
,
2001,
Vision Research.
[6]
Leslie G. Ungerleider,et al.
Perceptual filling-in: a parametric study
,
1998,
Vision Research.
[7]
Julie M. Harris,et al.
Filling-in the details on perceptual fading
,
2001,
Vision Research.
[8]
Peter De Weerd,et al.
Responses of cells in monkey visual cortex during perceptual filling-in of an artificial scotoma
,
1995,
Nature.
[9]
R. L. Gregory,et al.
Perceptual filling in of artificially induced scotomas in human vision
,
1991,
Nature.
[10]
Xoana G. Troncoso,et al.
Microsaccades Counteract Visual Fading during Fixation
,
2005,
Neuron.
[11]
A. L. Yarbus,et al.
Eye Movements and Vision
,
1967,
Springer US.