166 results match your criteria: "Institute for Sensory Research[Affiliation]"

What's special about horizontal disparity.

J Vis

November 2023

Institute for Sensory Research, Department of Biomedical and Chemical Engineering, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY, USA.

Horizontal disparity has been recognized as the primary signal driving stereoscopic depth since the invention of the stereoscope in the 1830s. It has a unique status in our understanding of binocular vision. The direction of offset of the eyes gives the disparities of corresponding image point locations across the two retinas a strong horizontal bias.

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Solving the stereo correspondence problem with false matches.

PLoS One

February 2020

Institute for Sensory Research, Department of Biomedical and Chemical Engineering, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York, United States of America.

The stereo correspondence problem exists because false matches between the images from multiple sensors camouflage the true (veridical) matches. True matches are correspondences between image points that have the same generative source; false matches are correspondences between similar image points that have different sources. This problem of selecting true matches among false ones must be overcome by both biological and artificial stereo systems in order for them to be useful depth sensors.

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Attentional selection in judgments of stereo depth.

Vision Res

May 2019

Institute for Sensory Research, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY 13244, USA. Electronic address:

Stereoscopic depth is most useful when it comes from relative rather than absolute disparities. However, the depth perceived from relative disparities can vary with stimulus parameters that have no connection with depth or are irrelevant to the task. We investigated observers' ability to judge the stereo depth of task-relevant stimuli while ignoring irrelevant stimuli.

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The Pacinian corpuscle (PC) is a cutaneous mechanoreceptor that senses low-amplitude, high-frequency vibrations. The PC contains a nerve fiber surrounded by alternating layers of solid lamellae and interlamellar fluid, and this structure is hypothesized to contribute to the PC's role as a band-pass filter for vibrations. In this study, we sought to evaluate the relationship between the PC's material and geometric parameters and its response to vibration.

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Enhancing speech envelope by integrating hair-cell adaptation into cochlear implant processing.

Hear Res

December 2016

Institute for Sensory Research, Department of Biomedical and Chemical Engineering, Syracuse University, 621 Skytop Road, Syracuse, NY 13244, United States. Electronic address:

Cochlear implants (CIs) bypass some of the mechanisms that underlie normal neural behavior as occurs in acoustic hearing. One such neural mechanism is short-term adaptation, which has been proposed to have a significant role in speech perception. Acoustically-evoked neural adaptation has been mainly attributed to the depletion of neurotransmitter in the hair-cell to auditory-nerve synapse and is therefore not fully present in CI stimulation.

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The effect of presentation level on spectral weights for sentences.

J Acoust Soc Am

January 2016

Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Institute for Sensory Research, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York 13244, USA.

Psychophysical data indicate that spectral weights tend to increase with increasing presentation level at high frequencies. The present study examined whether spectral weights for speech perception are similarly affected by presentation level. Stimuli were sentences filtered into five contiguous frequency bands and presented at each of two levels (75 and 95 dB sound pressure level [SPL]).

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Perceived depth in non-transitive stereo displays.

Vision Res

December 2014

Institute for Sensory Research, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY, USA.

The separation between the eyes shapes the distribution of binocular disparities and gives a special role to horizontal disparities. However, for one-dimensional stimuli, disparity direction, like motion direction, is linked to stimulus orientation. This makes the perceived depth of one-dimensional stimuli orientation dependent and generally non-veridical.

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Estimating confidence intervals for information transfer analysis of confusion matrices.

J Acoust Soc Am

March 2014

Institute for Sensory Research, Syracuse University, 621 Skytop Road, Syracuse, New York 13244

A non-parametric bootstrapping statistical method is introduced and investigated for estimating confidence intervals resulting from information transfer (IT) analysis of confusion matrices. Confidence intervals can be used to statistically compare ITs from two or more confusion matrices obtained in an experiment. Information transfer is a nonlinear analysis and does not satisfy many of the assumptions of a parametric method.

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Place specificity measured in forward and interleaved masking in cochlear implants.

J Acoust Soc Am

October 2013

Institute for Sensory Research, Syracuse University, 621 Skytop Road, Syracuse, New York 13244

Interleaved masking in cochlear implants is analogous to acoustic simultaneous masking and is relevant to speech processing strategies that interleave pulses on concurrently activated electrodes. In this study, spatial decay of masking as the distance between masker and probe increases was compared between forward and interleaved masking in the same group of cochlear implant users. Spatial masking patterns and the measures of place specificity were similar between forward and interleaved masking.

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Magnitude estimates of the tactile roughness of raised-dot surfaces revealed that perceived overall roughness, defined as the combination of the perceived roughness of the dot pattern and the perceived roughness of the individual dots in the pattern, is an inverted U-shaped function of dot spacing, reaching a maximum at approximately 3.0 mm of dot separation. The hypothesis that Pacinian corpuscles are involved in roughness perception has been supported by the finding that selective adaptation of the Pacinian corpuscle (PC) channel with a 250-Hz stimulus at 20-dB SL results in a decrease in the perceived overall roughness of the raised-dot surface at the fingertip.

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Learning in tactile channels.

J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform

April 2012

Institute for Sensory Research, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY 13244, USA.

Vibrotactile intensity-discrimination thresholds for sinusoidal stimuli applied to the thenar eminence of the hand declined as a function of practice. However, improvement was confined to the tactile information-processing channel in which learning had occurred. Specifically, improvements in performance with training within the Pacinian-corpuscle (PC) channel with a 250-Hz stimulus failed to transfer to performance within the rapidly adapting (RA) nerve fiber channel and the slowly adapting Type I (SA I) nerve fiber channel with a 20-Hz stimulus; similarly, improvements in performance with training within the RA/SA I channels failed to transfer to the PC channel.

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The characterization of ability in behavioral sound-localization tasks is an important aspect of understanding how the brain encodes and processes sound location information. In a few species, both physiological and behavioral results related to sound localization are available. In the Mongolian gerbil, physiological sensitivity to interaural time differences in the auditory brainstem is comparable to that reported in other species; however, the gerbil has been reported to have relatively poor behavioral localization performance as compared with several other species.

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Horizontal binocular disparity has long been the conventional predictor of stereo depth. Surprisingly, an alternative predictor fairs just as well. This alternative predicts the relative depth of two stimuli from the relation between their disparity vectors, without regard to horizontal disparities.

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Is perceptual space inherently non-Euclidean?

J Math Psychol

April 2009

Institute for Sensory Research, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY, 13244, USA.

It is often assumed that the space we perceive is Euclidean, although this idea has been challenged by many authors. Here we show that, if spatial cues are combined as described by Maximum Likelihood Estimation, Bayesian, or equivalent models, as appears to be the case, then Euclidean geometry cannot describe our perceptual experience. Rather, our perceptual spatial structure would be better described as belonging to an arbitrarily curved Riemannian space.

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A new theory of structure-from-motion perception.

J Vis

October 2009

Institute for Sensory Research, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY 13224, USA.

Humans can recover 3-D structure from the projected 2D motion field of a rotating object, a phenomenon called structure from motion (SFM). Current models of SFM perception are limited to the case in which objects rotate about a frontoparallel axis. However, as our recent psychophysical studies showed, frontoparallel axes of rotation are not representative of the general case.

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An evaluation of models for diotic and dichotic detection in reproducible noises.

J Acoust Soc Am

October 2009

Department of Biomedical and Chemical Engineering, Institute for Sensory Research, Syracuse University, 621 Skytop Road, Syracuse, New York 13244, USA.

Several psychophysical models for masked detection were evaluated using reproducible noises. The data were hit and false-alarm rates from three psychophysical studies of detection of 500-Hz tones in reproducible noise under diotic (N0S0) and dichotic (N0Spi) conditions with four stimulus bandwidths (50, 100, 115, and 2900 Hz). Diotic data were best predicted by an energy-based multiple-detector model that linearly combined stimulus energies at the outputs of several critical-band filters.

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Diotic and dichotic detection with reproducible chimeric stimuli.

J Acoust Soc Am

October 2009

Department of Biomedical and Chemical Engineering, Institute for Sensory Research, Syracuse University, 621 Skytop Road, Syracuse, New York 13244, USA.

Article Synopsis
  • The experiment focused on how well subjects could detect low-frequency tones in noise while examining the roles of envelope and fine-structure cues using narrow-band stimuli.
  • Researchers created chimeric stimuli by mixing envelopes and fine structures from different sounds to assess how sharing these features affected detection judgments.
  • Findings revealed that both envelope and fine-structure cues are important for sound detection, with their significance varying among individuals and ear conditions, suggesting they are processed together rather than separately.
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Even though binocular disparity is a very well-studied cue to depth, the function relating disparity and perceived depth has been characterized only for the case of horizontal disparities. We sought to determine the general relationship between disparity and depth for a particular set of stimuli. The horizontal disparity direction is a special case, albeit an especially important one.

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Projected disparity, not horizontal disparity, predicts stereo depth of 1-D patterns.

Vision Res

August 2009

Institute for Sensory Research, Syracuse University, 621 Skytop Rd., Syracuse, NY 13323-5290, USA.

Binocular disparities have a straightforward geometric relation to object depth, but the computation that humans use to turn disparity signals into depth percepts is neither straightforward nor well understood. One seemingly solid result, which came out of Wheatstone's work in the 1830s, is that the sign and magnitude of horizontal disparity predict the perceived depth of an object: 'positive' horizontal disparities yield the perception of 'far' depth, 'negative' horizontal disparities yield the perception of 'near' depth, and variations in the magnitude of horizontal disparity monotonically increase or decrease the perceived extent of depth. Here we show that this classic link between horizontal disparity and the perception of 'near' versus 'far' breaks down when the stimuli are one-dimensional.

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GABAergic/glutamatergic-glial/neuronal interaction contributes to rapid adaptation in pacinian corpuscles.

J Neurosci

March 2009

Institute for Sensory Research, Department of Biomedical and Chemical Engineering, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York 13244, USA.

Pacinian corpuscles (PCs) are tactile receptors composed of a nerve ending (neurite) that is encapsulated by layers of lamellar cells. PCs are classified as primary mechanoreceptors because there is no synapse between the transductive membrane and the site of action-potential generation. These touch receptors respond in a rapidly adapting manner to sustained pressure (indentation or displacement), which until now was believed to be attributable solely to the mechanical properties of the capsule.

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A neural model for the integration of stereopsis and motion parallax in structure-from-motion.

Neurocomputing (Amst)

March 2008

Institute for Sensory Research, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York 13244-5290, USA.

We introduce a model for the computation of structure-from-motion based on the physiology of visual cortical areas MT and MST. The model assumes that the perception of depth from motion is related to the firing of a subset of MT neurons tuned to both velocity and disparity. The model's MT neurons are connected to each other laterally to form modulatory receptive-field surrounds that are gated by feedback connections from area MST.

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Mesenteric and tactile Pacinian corpuscles are anatomically and physiologically comparable.

Somatosens Mot Res

September 2008

Institute for Sensory Research and Department of Biomedical and Chemical Engineering, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY 13244, USA.

Pacinian corpuscles (PCs) in cat mesentery have been studied extensively to help determine the structural and functional bases of tactile mechanotransduction. Although we, like many other investigators, have found that the mesenteric receptors are anatomically very similar to those found in mammalian skin, few physiological characteristics of the mesenteric PCs and those of the skin have been compared. Action-potential rate-amplitude and frequency characteristics (10 Hz-1 KHz), as well as interval (IH) and peri-stimulus-time (PSTH) histograms in response to sinusoidal displacements were obtained from nerve fibers innervating mesenteric PCs and from PC fibers innervating cat glabrous skin.

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The Merkel cell-neurite complex is considered to be one class of mechanoreceptors in the skin. Merkel cells are innervated by slowly adapting type I (SAI) tactile nerve fibers. In this paper, the detailed distribution of Merkel cells is studied by immunohistochemical labeling of the monkey (Macaca fascicularis) digital glabrous skin.

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Changes in transient-evoked otoacoustic emission levels with negative tympanometric peak pressure in infants and toddlers.

Ear Hear

August 2008

Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Institute for Sensory Research, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York 13244-5290, USA.

Objectives: Otoacoustic emission (OAE) testing is now a standard component of the diagnostic audiology protocol for infants and toddlers and is an excellent tool for detecting moderate-to-profound cochlear hearing loss. Detection of hearing loss is especially important in infants and toddlers. Unfortunately, middle-ear dysfunction has a high incidence in this age range and can confound interpretation of OAEs.

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Spectral weighting strategies for hearing-impaired listeners measured using a correlational method.

J Acoust Soc Am

April 2008

Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Institute for Sensory Research, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York 13244, USA.

Spectral weighting strategies using a correlational method [R. A. Lutfi, J.

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