Adams Wendy J, Mamassian Pascal
Department of Psychology, University of Glasgow, 58 Hillhead Street, Glasgow G12 8QB, UK.
Vision Res. 2002 Oct;42(23):2563-8. doi: 10.1016/s0042-6989(02)00269-9.
By presenting oriented Gabor patches either monocularly or binocularly, we dissociated retinal orientation from perceived tilt and perceived slant. After adapting to binocular patches, with zero apparent tilt and non-zero slant, small tilt after-effects (TAEs) and large slant after-effects (SAE) were measured. Adapting to monocular patches with non-zero tilt and zero slant produced large TAEs and smaller SAEs. This pattern of results suggests that a common, low-level adaptation to monocular orientation is involved in slant and tilt after-effects. However, the incomplete transfer between slant and tilt makes it clear that higher-level adaptation is also involved, perhaps at the level of surface representation.