Satoru Abe
Chiba University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Satoru Abe.
Journal of Vision | 2014
Eiji Kimura; Satoru Abe; Ken Goryo
The present study investigated the effects of interocular suppression on the pupillary constriction to luminance and color changes. Stable interocular suppression was produced by presenting a flickering high-contrast grating to one eye and a spatially homogeneous field to the other eye. The results showed that the pupillary responses to luminance as well as color changes were clearly attenuated during interocular suppression; the pupillary constriction to stimulus changes was delayed and reduced in amplitude when those changes occurred in the suppressed eye. The attenuation of the pupillary response was observed over a wide range of test contrast extending to well above the threshold level. Moreover, the properties of the suppressive effect were very similar to those assessed psychophysically using both detection thresholds for weak stimuli and reaction times for suprathreshold stimuli. Overall, the present study provided converging evidence that the pupillary response can be a useful objective probe of interocular suppression in humans. The results are discussed in view of possible differential involvements of subcortical and cortical visual processing in driving the pupillary response as well as in interocular suppression.
Journal of Vision | 2011
Satoru Abe; Eiji Kimura; Ken Goryo
Pre-exposure to a stimulus can modulate initial perceptual dominance experienced in binocular rivalry with brief test stimuli (onset rivalry). This study investigated this modulating effect using both color and pattern stimuli. We confirmed separate contributions of eye- and feature-based suppressions and showed that their relative strength varied with temporal parameters. Eye-based suppression was stronger with a short test duration (10 ms) and shorter ISIs between the preceding and test stimuli. On the other hand, feature-based suppression grew with ISI and was more pronounced with a longer test duration (200 ms). We also investigated the nature of the modulating effect associated with feature-based suppression using chromatic gratings of high luminance contrast. Results revealed that different features of the preceding stimulus (i.e., color and orientation) exerted nearly independent effects on onset rivalry. However, different features shared their fate in competitive interactions for perceptual dominance; when one feature became dominant, the other also dominated. These findings suggest that competitive interactions for perceptual dominance and the modulation of these interactions are mediated at least partially by different mechanisms. Overall, the present findings are consistent with a theoretical view that initial dominance is established through competitive interactions at multiple levels of processing.
Journal of Vision | 2010
Eiji Kimura; Satoru Abe; Ken Goryo
Journal of Vision | 2010
Satoru Abe; Eiji Kimura; Ken Goryo
Perception | 2009
Eiji Kimura; K Tanaka; Satoru Abe; Ken Goryo
Journal of Vision | 2007
Eiji Kimura; Satoru Abe; Ken Goryo
Journal of Vision | 2011
Eiji Kimura; Satoru Abe; Ken Goryo
Journal of Vision | 2010
Satoru Abe; Eiji Kimura; Ken Goryo
Journal of Vision | 2010
Eiji Kimura; Satoru Abe; Ken Goryo
Journal of Vision | 2010
Eiji Kimura; Satoru Abe; Ken Goryo