| Literature DB >> 30733577 |
Patrick Bruns1,2, Takeo Watanabe3.
Abstract
The brain has evolved to extract behaviourally meaningful information from the environment. For example, it has been shown that visual perceptual learning (VPL) can occur for task-irrelevant stimulus features when those features are consistently paired with internal or external reinforcement signals. It is, however, unclear whether or not task-irrelevant VPL is influenced by stimulus features that are unrelated to reinforcement in a given sensory context. To address this question, we exposed participants to task-irrelevant and subliminal coherent motion stimuli in the background while they performed a central character identification task. A specific motion direction was consistently paired with the task-targets, while two other directions occurred only with distractors and, thus, were unrelated to reinforcement. We found that the magnitude of VPL of the target-paired direction was significantly greater when the distractor-paired directions were close to the target-paired direction, compared to when they were farther. Thus, even very weak signals that are both subliminal and unrelated to reinforcement are processed and exert an influence on VPL. This finding suggests that the outcome of VPL depends on the sensory context in which learning takes place and calls for a refinement of VPL theories to incorporate exposure-based influences on learning.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30733577 PMCID: PMC6367344 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-38586-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Mean performance change in motion discrimination (with SEMs) at 5% and 10% motion coherence in the “small” group and the “large” group. Performance change was calculated by subtracting pretest from posttest performance for each tested motion direction and then collapsing data across equivalent motion directions clockwise and counterclockwise relative to the target-paired motion direction (0°). Dotted vertical lines indicate motion directions that were paired with targets (0°, both groups) or distractors (60°, “large” group) in the RSVP task during the training sessions.
Figure 2Schematic illustration of influences of two factors on performance enhancements for the target-paired motion direction in the two groups of the present study and the Seitz and Watanabe[16] study. The strength of reinforcement signals is determined by the degree of difficulty of the central RSVP task, and the strength of inter-directional facilitation is determined by the distance between target-paired and distractor-paired motion directions.