| Literature DB >> 24348083 |
Jennifer E Corbett1, Nicole Wurnitsch2, Alex Schwartz3, David Whitney2.
Abstract
The visual system rapidly represents the mean size of sets of objects. Here, we investigated whether mean size is explicitly encoded by the visual system, along a single dimension like texture, numerosity, and other visual dimensions susceptible to adaptation. Observers adapted to two sets of dots with different mean sizes, presented simultaneously in opposite visual fields. After adaptation, two test patches replaced the adapting dot sets, and participants judged which test appeared to have the larger average dot diameter. They generally perceived the test that replaced the smaller mean size adapting set as being larger than the test that replaced the larger adapting set. This differential aftereffect held for single test dots (Experiment 2) and high-pass filtered displays (Experiment 3), and changed systematically as a function of the variance of the adapting dot sets (Experiment 4), providing additional support that mean size is adaptable, and therefore explicitly encoded dimension of visual scenes.Entities:
Keywords: Adaptation aftereffect; Mean size; Summary representations
Year: 2012 PMID: 24348083 PMCID: PMC3859532 DOI: 10.1080/13506285.2012.657261
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vis cogn ISSN: 1350-6285