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. 1996 Dec 24;93(26):15508–15511. doi: 10.1073/pnas.93.26.15508

Figure 1.

Figure 1

The dichoptic pairs shown in AD induce binocular rivalry when brought into correspondence by means of converging (or diverging) the eyes (the black fixation marks should be fused). These stereo pairs offer a critical test for investigating the role of eye competition and pattern coherence in binocular rivalry. (A) Conventional rivalry inducing pair: eye of origin and pattern coherence are correlated. Alternation of the monkey face and the jungle scene is observed. (B) Patchwork rivalry stimulus: eye of origin and pattern coherence are uncorrelated. Alternation of the monkey face and the jungle scene can still be observed, which is unexplained by eye competition theories of rivalry. (C) Conventional color rivalry condition: eye of origin and pattern coherence are correlated. (D) Patchwork color rivalry condition: eye of origin and pattern coherence are uncorrelated. Eye competition would only predict mixed percepts here; however, all-red and all-green percepts are also observed. Similar stimuli were used in the reported experiments. Each eye’s frame was tessellated into fictitious abutting rectangular tiles (four columns by seven columns), and an element was placed within each tile with a random positional jitter. Elements were equiluminant to the uniform yellow background, the luminance of which was 7.5 candelas per m2, and their color was low-pass filtered spatially with a circular Gaussian envelope that had a σ of 11.2 min of arc. Thus, the element’s color was pure red (or green) at its center, and it gradually blended with the background at its edges. The Gaussian bell was truncated to zero at a radius of 16.4 min of arc. The equiluminant settings were individually obtained for each observer using a heterochromatic flicker photometry technique.