McGovern David P, Walsh Kevin S, Bell Jason, Newell Fiona N
Trinity College Institute of Neuroscience and School of Psychology, Trinity College Dublin, College Green, Dublin 2, Ireland.
Trinity College Institute of Neuroscience and School of Psychology, Trinity College Dublin, College Green, Dublin 2, Ireland.
Vision Res. 2017 Dec;141:109-116. doi: 10.1016/j.visres.2016.08.009. Epub 2016 Oct 26.
Both spatial and temporal context influence our perception of visual stimuli. For instance, both nearby moving stimuli and recently viewed motion can lead to biases in the perceived direction of a moving stimulus. Due to similarities in the spatial tuning properties of these spatial and temporal context-dependent effects, it is often assumed that they share a functional goal in motion processing and arise from common neural mechanisms. However, the psychophysical evidence concerning this assumption is inconsistent. Here we used an individual differences approach to examine the relationship between different effects of contextual modulation on perception. We reasoned that if measures of contextual modulation share a common underlying mechanism, they should exhibit a strong positive correlation across participants. To test this hypothesis, estimates of the direction aftereffect, direction repulsion, the tilt aftereffect and contrast adaptation were obtained from 54 healthy participants. Our results show pronounced interindividual differences in the effect sizes of all four tasks. Furthermore, there was a strong positive correlation between the estimates of the direction aftereffect and direction repulsion. This correlation was also evident in the threshold elevations that accompanied these repulsive biases in perceived direction. While the effects of contrast adaptation did not correlate with any of the other tasks, there was a weak, but non-significant, correlation between the direction and tilt aftereffects. These results provide evidence for common mechanisms underlying the direction aftereffect and direction repulsion.
空间和时间背景都会影响我们对视觉刺激的感知。例如,附近的移动刺激和最近看到的运动都可能导致对移动刺激的感知方向产生偏差。由于这些空间和时间背景依赖效应在空间调谐特性上的相似性,人们通常认为它们在运动处理中具有共同的功能目标,并且源于共同的神经机制。然而,关于这一假设的心理物理学证据并不一致。在这里,我们采用个体差异方法来研究上下文调制对感知的不同影响之间的关系。我们推断,如果上下文调制的测量共享一个共同的潜在机制,那么它们在参与者之间应该表现出很强的正相关。为了验证这一假设,我们从54名健康参与者那里获得了方向后效、方向排斥、倾斜后效和对比度适应的估计值。我们的结果显示,所有四项任务的效应大小在个体间存在显著差异。此外,方向后效和方向排斥的估计值之间存在很强的正相关。在伴随这些感知方向排斥偏差的阈值升高方面,这种相关性也很明显。虽然对比度适应的效应与其他任何任务都没有相关性,但方向后效和倾斜后效之间存在微弱但不显著的相关性。这些结果为方向后效和方向排斥背后的共同机制提供了证据。