Rapid fluctuations in contrast are common in our modern visual environment. They arise, for example, in a room lit by a fluorescent light, when viewing a CRT computer monitor and when watching a movie in a cinema. As we are unconscious of the rapid changes, it has been assumed that they do not affect the operation of our visual systems. By periodically reversing the contrast of a fixed pattern at a rapid rate we render the pattern itself, as well as the modulations, invisible to observers. We show that exposure to these rapidly contrast-modulated patterns alters the way subsequent stationary patterns are processed; patterns similar to the contrast-modulated pattern require more contrast to be detected than dissimilar patterns. We present evidence that the changes are cortically mediated. Taken together, our findings suggest that cortical stages of the visual system respond to the individual frames of a contrast-reversed sequence, even at rates as high as 160 frames per second.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1167/10.8.21 | DOI Listing |
Comput Intell Neurosci
November 2021
Department of Mathematics, Faculty of Science, Al-Baha University, Al-Bahah, Saudi Arabia.
Watermarking techniques in a wide range of digital media was utilized as a host cover to hide or embed a piece of information message in such a way that it is invisible to a human observer. This study aims to develop an enhanced rapid and blind method for producing a watermarked 3D object using QR code images with high imperceptibility and transparency. The proposed method is based on the spatial domain, and it starts with converting the 3D object triangles from the three-dimensional Cartesian coordinate system to the two-dimensional coordinates domain using the corresponding transformation matrix.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWater Res
June 2021
Delft University of Technology, Faculty of Civil Engineering and Geosciences, Department of Water Management, PO Box 5048, 2600 GA, Delft, the Netherlands; Waternet, PO Box 94370, 1090 GJ, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Fluid flow through a bed of solid particles is an important process that occurs in full-scale water treatment operations. The Carman-Kozeny model remains highly popular for estimating the resistance across the bed. It is common practice to use particle shape factors in fixed bed state to match the predicted drag coefficient with experimentally obtained drag coefficients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
May 2021
School of Sport, Exercise & Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom.
When standing, intrinsic ankle stiffness is smaller when measured using large perturbations, when sway size is large, and when background torque is low. However, there is a large variation in individual intrinsic ankle stiffness. Here we determine if individual variation has consequences for postural control.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Adv
July 2020
School of the Earth, Ocean and Environment, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, USA.
Marine protists are integral to the structure and function of pelagic ecosystems and marine carbon cycling, with rhizarian biomass alone accounting for more than half of all mesozooplankton in the oligotrophic oceans. Yet, understanding how their environment shapes diversity within species and across taxa is limited by a paucity of observations of heritability and life history. Here, we present observations of asexual reproduction, morphologic plasticity, and ontogeny in the planktic foraminifer in laboratory culture.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrosc Res Tech
August 2019
Department of Anatomy and Embryology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Benha University, Qalyubia, Egypt.
While epiglottis is essentially a mammalian structure, studying its microstructure in any placental model will add an important information to the field of comparative anatomy and the related branches of biology. The aim of this study was to describe the structure of the epiglottis in dromedary camels using light and scanning electron microscopy (SEM), with reference to the possible functions. A total of 11 epiglottis cartilages from 11 larynges were used.
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