Department of Experimental and Theoretical Neuroscience, Center for Cognitive and Neural Studies (Coneural), Romanian Institute of Science and Technology, Cluj-Napoca, Romania.
PLoS One. 2011;6(7):e22831. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0022831. Epub 2011 Jul 27.
Mechanisms of explicit object recognition are often difficult to investigate and require stimuli with controlled features whose expression can be manipulated in a precise quantitative fashion. Here, we developed a novel method (called "Dots"), for generating visual stimuli, which is based on the progressive deformation of a regular lattice of dots, driven by local contour information from images of objects. By applying progressively larger deformation to the lattice, the latter conveys progressively more information about the target object. Stimuli generated with the presented method enable a precise control of object-related information content while preserving low-level image statistics, globally, and affecting them only little, locally. We show that such stimuli are useful for investigating object recognition under a naturalistic setting--free visual exploration--enabling a clear dissociation between object detection and explicit recognition. Using the introduced stimuli, we show that top-down modulation induced by previous exposure to target objects can greatly influence perceptual decisions, lowering perceptual thresholds not only for object recognition but also for object detection (visual hysteresis). Visual hysteresis is target-specific, its expression and magnitude depending on the identity of individual objects. Relying on the particular features of dot stimuli and on eye-tracking measurements, we further demonstrate that top-down processes guide visual exploration, controlling how visual information is integrated by successive fixations. Prior knowledge about objects can guide saccades/fixations to sample locations that are supposed to be highly informative, even when the actual information is missing from those locations in the stimulus. The duration of individual fixations is modulated by the novelty and difficulty of the stimulus, likely reflecting cognitive demand.
明确的物体识别机制通常难以研究,需要具有受控特征的刺激物,其表达可以以精确的定量方式进行操作。在这里,我们开发了一种新的方法(称为“Dots”),用于生成视觉刺激,该方法基于从物体图像中的局部轮廓信息驱动的规则点格的渐进变形。通过对点格施加逐渐增大的变形,后者逐渐传递出更多关于目标物体的信息。使用所提出的方法生成的刺激物能够精确控制与物体相关的信息量,同时保留全局的低水平图像统计信息,并局部地对其影响很小。我们表明,这些刺激物可用于在自然主义的视觉自由探索环境下研究物体识别,从而可以清楚地区分物体检测和明确识别。使用引入的刺激物,我们表明,先前暴露于目标物体引起的自上而下的调制可以极大地影响感知决策,不仅降低了物体识别的感知阈值,而且降低了物体检测的感知阈值(视觉滞后)。视觉滞后是特定于目标的,其表达和大小取决于个体物体的身份。依靠点刺激的特定特征和眼动跟踪测量,我们进一步表明,自上而下的过程指导视觉探索,控制着连续注视如何整合视觉信息。关于物体的先验知识可以指导扫视/注视到被认为是高度信息丰富的采样位置,即使在刺激中这些位置实际上没有实际信息。单个注视的持续时间受到刺激的新颖性和难度的调制,可能反映了认知需求。