Subjects. The authors served as subjects in all four of the experiments reported here. Two subjects were male (J.M., age 60 years, and K.T., age 24 years) and the other female (M.F., age 29 years). M.F. was initially naive as to the hypothesis under investigation. All of the subjects had visual acuity corrected to 20/20. Informed consent and subject protection was in adherence with NIH guidelines.Procedure. In this experiment, two sequential frames were used to gather baseline data on the Troxler effect. Both were presented on a computer display 2 and subtended 30.5º (width) 3 20.8º (height) of visual angle (VA). The background luminance was the same for both stimuli (57.0 cd/m 2 ). 3 The first frame contained only a centrally located circular fixation target (VA = 7¢ in diameter; 2.0 cd /m 2 ). In the second frame, an ellipsoid disk (VA = 6.1º in width 3 4.8º in height), the left edge of which was located 8.0º to the right of fixation, was added. The luminance of the disk in the second frame was lighter or darker than the background and varied in luminance (lighter = 69.0, 62.0, and 58 cd/m 2 ; darker = 38.0, 43.0, and 46.0 cd/m 2 ). The contrasts between these disks and the 763