In 7 pigeons binocular interactions were studied by recording monocular and binocular choice reaction times (RTs) to a pattern discrimination task. In all the animals binocular responses were found to be significantly faster than monocular RTs. In order to assess whether binocular advantage might be ascribed to a neural interaction between the two eyes, monocular and binocular performances were evaluated according to a probability summation model. The results indicate that in the great majority of animals, probability summation alone can account for binocular superiority.

Binocular interactions measured by choice reaction times in pigeons.

Kusmic C;
1987

Abstract

In 7 pigeons binocular interactions were studied by recording monocular and binocular choice reaction times (RTs) to a pattern discrimination task. In all the animals binocular responses were found to be significantly faster than monocular RTs. In order to assess whether binocular advantage might be ascribed to a neural interaction between the two eyes, monocular and binocular performances were evaluated according to a probability summation model. The results indicate that in the great majority of animals, probability summation alone can account for binocular superiority.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/3447
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