Department of Clinical Neurology, University of Oxford, Oxford, England, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2010 Jul 30;5(7):e11906. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0011906.
The ability to detect and integrate associations between unrelated items that are close in space and time is a key feature of human learning and memory. Learning sequential associations between non-adjacent visual stimuli (higher-order visuospatial dependencies) can occur either with or without awareness (explicit vs. implicit learning) of the products of learning. Existing behavioural and neurocognitive studies of explicit and implicit sequence learning, however, are based on conscious access to the sequence of target locations and, typically, on conditions where the locations for orienting, or motor, responses coincide with the locations of the target sequence.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Dichoptic stimuli were presented on a novel sequence learning task using a mirror stereoscope to mask the eye-of-origin of visual input from conscious awareness. We demonstrate that conscious access to the sequence of target locations and responses that coincide with structure of the target sequence are dispensable features when learning higher-order visuospatial associations. Sequence knowledge was expressed in the ability of participants to identify the trained higher-order visuospatial sequence on a recognition test, even though the trained and untrained recognition sequences were identical when viewed at a conscious binocular level, and differed only at the level of the masked sequential associations.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These results demonstrate that unconscious processing can support perceptual learning of higher-order sequential associations through interocular integration of retinotopic-based codes stemming from monocular eye-of-origin information. Furthermore, unlike other forms of perceptual associative learning, visuospatial attention did not need to be directed to the locations of the target sequence. More generally, the results pose a challenge to neural models of learning to account for a previously unknown capacity of the human visual system to support the detection, learning and recognition of higher-order sequential associations under conditions where observers are unable to see the target sequence or perform responses that coincide with structure of the target sequence.
能够检测和整合在空间和时间上接近的不相关项目之间的关联是人类学习和记忆的关键特征。在非相邻视觉刺激之间学习序列关联(高阶视空间依赖)可以在有或没有对学习产物的意识(显性与隐性学习)的情况下发生。然而,现有的显性和隐性序列学习的行为和神经认知研究都是基于对目标位置序列的有意识访问,并且通常基于定向或运动反应的位置与目标序列的位置重合的条件。
方法/主要发现:使用立体镜呈现双眼分离刺激,以遮蔽视觉输入的眼起源,从而在一个新的序列学习任务中进行。我们证明,当学习高阶视空间关联时,有意识地访问目标位置序列和与目标序列结构一致的反应是可有可无的特征。即使在有意识的双眼水平下,训练和未训练的识别序列是相同的,而仅在掩蔽的顺序关联水平上有所不同,参与者仍然能够在识别测试中识别训练过的高阶视空间序列,从而表现出序列知识。
结论/意义:这些结果表明,无意识处理可以通过来自单眼眼起源信息的视网膜空间编码的眼间整合,支持高阶序列关联的知觉学习。此外,与其他形式的知觉联想学习不同,视空间注意不需要指向目标序列的位置。更一般地说,这些结果对学习的神经模型提出了挑战,需要解释人类视觉系统的一个先前未知的能力,即在观察者无法看到目标序列或执行与目标序列结构一致的反应的情况下,支持高阶序列关联的检测、学习和识别。