When a temporally fluctuating background is rapidly
modulated (e.g. 30 Hz), the threshold variation of a superimposed
flash (the probe) is approximately sinusoidal and in phase
with the stimulus. But, with low rates of sinusoidal modulation
(e.g. 1 Hz), the threshold variation is distinctly nonsinusoidal
in shape. The bases of these aspects of the data, as well
as an unmodulated, dc, threshold elevation, are poorly
understood. Here 30-Hz and 1-Hz conditions are simulated
using a new model of light adaptation (Wilson, 1997). By
assuming that the OFF pathway is twice as sensitive as
the ON pathway, the model correctly captured the key aspects
of both conditions. The results suggest that the 1-Hz data
are mediated by a mixture of ON and OFF pathways while
the 30-Hz data are largely mediated by the OFF pathway.
The probe thresholds on the 30-Hz background appear approximately
sinusoidal and approximately in phase with the background
stimulus. A number of factors contribute to this deceptively
simple observation.