VISION
Online ISSN : 2433-5630
Print ISSN : 0917-1142
ISSN-L : 0917-1142
Volume 17, Issue 4
Displaying 1-4 of 4 articles from this issue
  • Mariko Imamura, Sachio Nakamizo
    2005 Volume 17 Issue 4 Pages 237-241
    Published: 2005
    Released on J-STAGE: April 19, 2019
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

    Emmert’s law and the size-distance invariance hypothesis have been said to be equivalent formally if Emmert’s law can be assumed to state that perceived size of an afterimage is proportional to perceived distance of the projected surface of the afterimage. However, there have been very few studies that attempted to verify this formal equivalence empirically. We measured perceived sizes and distances of an afterimage and real objects. Nineteen participants projected afterimages of 1 deg in visual angle on the wall located at 1m to 23m away from the participants, and also observed real objects of 1 deg in visual angle, which were located at the same physical distances as those of the afterimage. Each participant reproduced apparent sizes of the afterimages or real objects using the reproduction method and estimated apparent distances using the magnitude estimation method. When the mean apparent sizes of the afterimage and real objects represented as a function of apparent distance were fitted to linear functions, the slopes did not differ between afterimage and real object. These results were interpreted as evidence for the formal equivalence of Emmert’s law and the size-distance invariance hypothesis.

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  • Yasushi Naruse, Ayumu Matani, Tomoe Hayakawa, Norio Fujimaki
    2005 Volume 17 Issue 4 Pages 243-253
    Published: 2005
    Released on J-STAGE: April 19, 2019
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

    An influence of the seamless continuity between prestimulus alpha rhythm and poststimulus alpha ringing on visual evoked potential (VEP) has been investigated in nine adult subjects. Alpha ringing is an evoked potential appearing in alpha frequency around the latency of 500ms. The subjects passively viewed a series of 1000 flash stimuli with their eyelids closed throughout the experiment. EEG was simultaneously recorded during the experiment. We classified the epochs into four subsets owing to the seamlessness; how much the phase angle of prestimulus alpha rhythm and the backward-extrapolated phase angle from poststimulus alpha ringing synchronize, and then averaged the epochs within the subsets. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) test indicated that the peak amplitudes of N70 and P100 components were significantly different among subsets. These results imply that the seamless continuity between prestimulus alpha rhythm and poststimulus alpha ringing has influence on VEP.

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