| Literature DB >> 31827138 |
Abstract
Visual perception is systematically biased towards input from the recent past: perceived orientation, numerosity, and face identity are pulled towards previously seen stimuli. To better understand the brain level at which serial dependence occurs, the present study examined its spatial tuning. In three experiments, serial dependence occurred between stimuli occupying the same retinal position. Serial dependence between stimuli at distant retinal locations was smaller, even when the stimuli occupied the same location in external space. The spatial window over which serial dependence occurs is thus retinotopic, but wide, suggesting that serial dependence occurs at late stages of visual processing.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31827138 PMCID: PMC6906435 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-55134-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(A) Procedure. A fixation and, in experiments 2–3, a cue, appeared for 250 ms, followed by a Gabor patch for 500 ms, a 1000-ms blank, and the response cue. Subjects adjusted the response cue until it matched the Gabor patch, then pressed on the space bar to validate their response and go to the next trial. (B) Conditions given a previous trial with a central fixation point and a Gabor patch on the top right. Identity: same fixation point and Gabor patch position on the screen between previous and current trials, i.e. no saccade between trials; Spatiotopic: new fixation point but same Gabor patch position on the screen; Retinotopic: new fixation and new Gabor patch position on screen, but relative positions of fixation point and Gabor patch identical between previous and current trials; Control: new Gabor patch position on screen, fixation point and Gabor patch at different relative positions between trials. (C) Spatial configuration of Experiments 1, 2 and 3 (top, middle, bottom panels respectively).
Figure 2(A) Error as a function of relative orientation between previous and current trials, for each of the four conditions, in Experiment 1. The inset shows error as a function of relative orientation between the current trial and one trial in the future. (B–D) Amplitude (mean ± 95% confidence intervals) of the DoG for each of the four conditions, in Experiments 1–3. Dashed outlines in Experiment 1 show amplitude of serial dependence between 2-back trials.
Figure 3Error as a function of relative orientation depending on distance between previous and current Gabor patches. Identity condition: zero dva apart; near condition: 22 dva apart; far condition: 44 dva apart. The grey line illustrates a linear fit to the far data (that could not be fit by a DoG). Inset: Amplitude (mean ± 95% confidence intervals) of the DoG for identity and near conditions.