Dobkins Karen R, Rezec Amy A, Krekelberg Bart
Department of Psychology, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA.
Vision Res. 2007 Jun;47(14):1893-906. doi: 10.1016/j.visres.2006.12.021. Epub 2007 Apr 18.
While several previous psychophysical and neurophysiological studies have demonstrated chromatic (red/green) input to motion processing, the nature of this input is still a matter of debate. In particular, there exists controversy as to whether chromatic motion processing is mediated by low-level motion mechanisms versus higher-level, attention- or salience-based mechanisms. To address the role of attention, in Experiment 1, we asked whether spatial attention exerts larger effects on chromatic (red/green), as compared to achromatic, motion. To this end, we employed a motion after-effect (MAE) paradigm, and measured attention effects by comparing MAE duration between conditions where subjects attended to the adapting moving grating stimulus versus ignored that stimulus because they were required to perform an attentionally demanding vowel detection task at the center of gaze. The results from these experiments revealed equal effects of spatial attention on chromatic and achromatic motion processing, which were essentially constant (roughly 1.4-fold) across a wide range of stimulus contrasts (3.2-25% cone contrast). These findings suggest that chromatic motion processing is not affected disproportionally by higher-level spatial attention mechanisms. To address the role of salience, in Experiment 2, we investigated the effects of bottom-up salience cues on the strength of chromatic and achromatic motion, as measured with the MAE. Salience was manipulated by varying the relationship between the moving gratings and the background color. The results of these experiments revealed small and insignificant effects of salience cues on chromatic and achromatic motion processing. These findings suggest that mechanisms sensitive to feature salience do not influence low-level chromatic motion mechanisms mediating the motion after-effect.
虽然之前的一些心理物理学和神经生理学研究已经证明了颜色(红/绿)输入参与运动处理,但这种输入的性质仍然存在争议。特别是,关于颜色运动处理是由低级运动机制介导,还是由基于高级、注意力或显著性的机制介导,存在争议。为了探究注意力的作用,在实验1中,我们询问空间注意力对颜色(红/绿)运动的影响是否比对非颜色运动的影响更大。为此,我们采用了运动后效(MAE)范式,并通过比较受试者关注适应运动光栅刺激的条件与因需要在注视中心执行一项需要注意力的元音检测任务而忽略该刺激的条件下的MAE持续时间,来测量注意力的影响。这些实验的结果表明,空间注意力对颜色和非颜色运动处理的影响是相同的,在广泛的刺激对比度(3.2 - 25%视锥细胞对比度)范围内基本保持不变(约为1.4倍)。这些发现表明,颜色运动处理不会受到高级空间注意力机制的不成比例的影响。为了探究显著性的作用,在实验2中,我们研究了自下而上的显著性线索对颜色和非颜色运动强度的影响,使用MAE进行测量。通过改变运动光栅与背景颜色之间的关系来操纵显著性。这些实验的结果表明,显著性线索对颜色和非颜色运动处理的影响很小且不显著。这些发现表明,对特征显著性敏感的机制不会影响介导运动后效的低级颜色运动机制。