Pearson Joel, Clifford Colin G W
Color, Form & Motion Lab, Visual Perception Unit, School of Psychology, The University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.
J Vis. 2004 Mar 19;4(3):196-202. doi: 10.1167/4.3.6.
The inability of the human visual system to fuse dissimilar patterns in corresponding regions of the two eyes results in stochastic alternation of perceptual dominance between the two patterns: rivalry. When rivalrous stimuli are presented intermittently their perception is stabilized (Leopold, Wilke, Maier, & Logothetis, 2002). This stability indicates the operation of some kind of perceptual memory across interruptions in stimulation. Here we examined the contents of this perceptual memory to quantify the relative contributions of different sources of information: eye-of-origin, orientation, and color. Stimuli were intermittently presented and, during each blank interruption, we swapped either the color, orientation, or eye of presentation of the gratings. Comparing the percepts reported before and after each interruption allowed us to establish what aspects of perception remained stable. During conventional binocular rivalry, the eye in which the stimulus was presented remained stable across 74% of interruptions. Stimulus color and orientation also had weaker significant effects. When eye-of-origin information was eliminated by alternating the patterns rapidly between the two eyes, stimulus color remained stable across 86% of interruptions. Stimulus orientation again had a weaker but significant effect. These results demonstrate that the mechanisms mediating perceptual stability across interruptions in rivalry can operate at both monocular and binocular levels, much like the mechanisms operating during continuous viewing of rivalrous stimuli. On the basis of this similarity, we speculate that perceptual memory across interruptions in rivalry may involve the same neural representations as visual competition during rivalry. If this is the case, the use of intermittent stimulation in rivalry might permit the investigation of aspects of the mechanisms underlying visual competition that remain hidden during continuous presentation.
人类视觉系统无法融合两只眼睛相应区域中的不同图案,这导致两种图案之间在感知优势上出现随机交替:即竞争。当竞争性刺激间歇性呈现时,它们的感知会变得稳定(利奥波德、威尔克、迈尔和洛戈塞蒂斯,2002年)。这种稳定性表明在刺激中断期间存在某种感知记忆在起作用。在此,我们研究了这种感知记忆的内容,以量化不同信息源的相对贡献:图案呈现的眼睛、方向和颜色。刺激间歇性呈现,并且在每次空白中断期间,我们交换光栅的颜色、方向或图案呈现的眼睛。比较每次中断前后报告的感知,使我们能够确定感知的哪些方面保持稳定。在传统的双眼竞争中,刺激呈现所在的眼睛在74%的中断中保持稳定。刺激的颜色和方向也有较弱但显著的影响。当通过在两只眼睛之间快速交替图案来消除图案呈现眼睛的信息时,刺激颜色在86%的中断中保持稳定。刺激方向再次有较弱但显著的影响。这些结果表明,介导竞争中断期间感知稳定性的机制可以在单眼和双眼水平上发挥作用,这与在持续观看竞争性刺激期间起作用的机制非常相似。基于这种相似性,我们推测竞争中断期间的感知记忆可能涉及与竞争期间视觉竞争相同的神经表征。如果是这样,在竞争中使用间歇性刺激可能允许研究在持续呈现期间仍隐藏的视觉竞争机制的各个方面。