The Bouma law of crowding, revised: critical spacing is equal across parts, not objects

J Vis. 2014 Dec 10;14(6):10. doi: 10.1167/14.6.10.

Abstract

Crowding is the inability to identify an object among flankers in the periphery. It is due to inappropriate incorporation of features from flanking objects in perception of the target. Crowding is characterized by measuring critical spacing, the minimum distance needed between a target and flankers to allow recognition. The existing Bouma law states that, at a given point and direction in the visual field, critical spacing, measured from the center of a target object to the center of a similar flanking object, is the same for all objects (Pelli & Tillman, 2008). Because flipping an object about its center preserves its center-to-center spacing to other objects, according to the Bouma law, crowding should be unaffected. However, because crowding is a result of feature combination, the location of features within an object might matter. In a series of experiments, we find that critical spacing is affected by the location of features within the flanker. For some flankers, a flip greatly reduces crowding even though it maintains target-flanker spacing and similarity. Our results suggest that the existing Bouma law applies to simple one-part objects, such as a single roman letter or a Gabor patch. Many objects consist of multiple parts; for example, a word is composed of multiple letters that crowd each other. To cope with such complex objects, we revise the Bouma law to say that critical spacing is equal across parts, rather than objects. This accounts for old and new findings.

Keywords: Bouma Law; critical spacing; crowding; feature combination; peripheral vision.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Crowding*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Pattern Recognition, Visual / physiology*
  • Psychometrics
  • Visual Fields / physiology*
  • Young Adult