Literature DB >> 31251808

Disambiguating serial effects of multiple timescales.

Nikos Gekas1,2, Kyle C McDermott1,3, Pascal Mamassian1.   

Abstract

What has been previously experienced can systematically affect human perception in the present. We designed a novel psychophysical experiment to measure the perceptual effects of adapting to dynamically changing stimulus statistics. Observers are presented with a series of oriented Gabor patches and are asked occasionally to judge the orientation of highly ambiguous test patches. We developed a computational model to quantify the influence of past stimuli presentations on the observers' perception of test stimuli over multiple timescales and to show that this influence is distinguishable from simple response biases. The experimental results reveal that perception is attracted toward the very recent past and simultaneously repulsed from stimuli presented at short to medium timescales and attracted to presentations further in the past. All effects differ significantly both on their relative strength and their respective duration. Our model provides a structured way of quantifying serial effects in psychophysical experiments, and it could help experimenters in identifying such effects in their data and distinguish them from less interesting response biases.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31251808     DOI: 10.1167/19.6.24

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Vis        ISSN: 1534-7362            Impact factor:   2.240


  8 in total

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Authors:  Matthias Fritsche; Eelke Spaak; Floris P de Lange
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2020-06-01       Impact factor: 8.140

2.  Optimizing perception: Attended and ignored stimuli create opposing perceptual biases.

Authors:  Mohsen Rafiei; Sabrina Hansmann-Roth; David Whitney; Árni Kristjánsson; Andrey Chetverikov
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3.  Serial dependence revealed in history-dependent perceptual templates.

Authors:  Yuki Murai; David Whitney
Journal:  Curr Biol       Date:  2021-06-03       Impact factor: 10.900

4.  Brief Stimuli Cast a Persistent Long-Term Trace in Visual Cortex.

Authors:  Matthias Fritsche; Samuel G Solomon; Floris P de Lange
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2022-01-21       Impact factor: 6.709

5.  Serial dependence alters perceived object appearance.

Authors:  Thérèse Collins
Journal:  J Vis       Date:  2020-12-02       Impact factor: 2.240

6.  Suprathreshold perceptual decisions constrain models of confidence.

Authors:  Shannon M Locke; Michael S Landy; Pascal Mamassian
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2022-07-27       Impact factor: 4.779

7.  A shared mechanism for facial expression in human faces and face pareidolia.

Authors:  David Alais; Yiben Xu; Susan G Wardle; Jessica Taubert
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2021-07-07       Impact factor: 5.349

8.  How one block of trials influences the next: persistent effects of disease prevalence and feedback on decisions about images of skin lesions in a large online study.

Authors:  Jeremy M Wolfe
Journal:  Cogn Res Princ Implic       Date:  2022-02-02
  8 in total

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