Dieter Kevin C, Melnick Michael D, Tadin Duje
Vanderbilt Vision Research Center, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37240;
Department of Psychology, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN 37240.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Nov 8;113(45):12874-12879. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1602722113. Epub 2016 Oct 24.
The effects of attention, as well as its functional utility, are particularly prominent when selecting among multiple stimuli that compete for processing resources. However, existing studies have found that binocular rivalry-a phenomenon characterized by perceptual competition between incompatible stimuli presented to the two eyes-is only modestly influenced by selective attention. Here, we demonstrate that the relative resistance of binocular rivalry to selective modulations gradually erodes over the course of extended perceptual training that uses a demanding, feature-based attentional task. The final result was a dramatic alteration in binocular rivalry dynamics, leading to profound predominance of the trained stimulus. In some cases, trained observers saw the trained rival image nearly exclusively throughout 4-min viewing periods. This large change in binocular rivalry predominance was driven by two factors: task-independent, eye-specific changes in visual processing, as well as an enhanced ability of attention to promote predominance of the task-relevant stimulus. Notably, this strengthening of task-driven attention also exhibited eye specificity above and beyond that from observed sensory processing changes. These empirical results, along with simulations from a recently developed model of interocular suppression, reveal that stimulus predominance during binocular rivalry can be realized both through an eye-specific boost in processing of sensory information and through facilitated deployment of attention to task-relevant features in the trained eye. Our findings highlight the interplay of attention and binocular rivalry at multiple visual processing stages and reveal that sustained training can substantially alter early visual mechanisms.
当在争夺处理资源的多个刺激中进行选择时,注意力的影响及其功能效用尤为突出。然而,现有研究发现,双眼竞争——一种以呈现给双眼的不相容刺激之间的感知竞争为特征的现象——仅受到选择性注意力的适度影响。在这里,我们证明,在使用一项要求苛刻的、基于特征的注意力任务进行的长时间感知训练过程中,双眼竞争对选择性调制的相对抗性会逐渐减弱。最终结果是双眼竞争动态发生了巨大变化,导致训练刺激的显著优势。在某些情况下,经过训练的观察者在4分钟的观察期内几乎只看到训练过的竞争图像。双眼竞争优势的这种巨大变化是由两个因素驱动的:视觉处理中与任务无关的、特定于眼睛的变化,以及注意力促进与任务相关刺激优势的能力增强。值得注意的是,这种任务驱动注意力的增强还表现出超越观察到的感觉处理变化的眼睛特异性。这些实证结果,连同最近开发的眼间抑制模型的模拟,揭示了双眼竞争期间的刺激优势可以通过对感觉信息处理的特定于眼睛的增强以及通过促进将注意力部署到训练眼睛中与任务相关的特征来实现。我们的研究结果突出了注意力和双眼竞争在多个视觉处理阶段的相互作用,并揭示了持续训练可以显著改变早期视觉机制。