Marques-Carneiro José Eduardo, Polgári Patrik, Koning Estelle, Seyller Emilie, Martin Brice, Van der Burg Erik, Giersch Anne
Université de Strasbourg, INSERM U1114, Pôle de Psychiatrie, Fédération de Médecine Translationnelle de Strasbourg (FMTS) Centre Hospitalier Régional Universitaire of Strasbourg, 1, pl de l'Hôpital, 67000, Strasbourg, France.
Centre Ressource de Réhabilitation psychosociale et de remédiation cognitive, Centre Référent Lyonnais en Réhabilitation et en Remédiation cognitive (CL3R) Hôpital du Vinatier; CNRS UMR 5229, Lyon, France.
Atten Percept Psychophys. 2020 Aug;82(6):2821-2836. doi: 10.3758/s13414-020-01995-3.
Learning and imitating a complex motor action requires to visually follow complex movements, but conscious perception seems too slow for such tasks. Recent findings suggest that visual perception has a higher temporal resolution at an unconscious than at a conscious level. Here we investigate whether high-temporal resolution in visual perception relies on prediction mechanisms and attention shifts based on recently experienced sequences of visual information. To that aim we explore sequential effects during four different simultaneity/asynchrony discrimination tasks. Two stimuli are displayed on each trial with varying stimulus onset asynchronies (SOA). Subjects decide whether the stimuli are simultaneous or asynchronous and give manual responses. The main finding is an advantage for different-order over same-order trials, when subjects decided that stimuli had been simultaneous on Trial t - 1 , and when Trial t is with an SOA slightly larger than Trial t - 1, or equivalent. The advantage for different-order trials disappears when the stimuli change eccentricity but not direction between trials (Experiment 2), and persists with stimuli displayed in the centre and unlikely to elicit a sense of direction (Experiment 4). It is still observed when asynchronies on Trial t - 1 are small and undetected (Experiment 3). The findings can be explained by an attention shift that is precisely planned in time and space and that incidentally allows subjects to detect an isolated stimulus on the screen, thus helping them to detect an asynchrony.
学习和模仿复杂的运动动作需要视觉上跟随复杂的动作,但有意识的感知对于此类任务而言似乎太慢。最近的研究结果表明,视觉感知在无意识层面的时间分辨率高于有意识层面。在此,我们研究视觉感知中的高时间分辨率是否依赖于预测机制以及基于近期经历的视觉信息序列的注意力转移。为了实现这一目标,我们在四种不同的同时性/异步性辨别任务中探索序列效应。每次试验中会呈现两个刺激,刺激起始异步性(SOA)各不相同。受试者判断刺激是同时出现还是异步出现,并做出手动反应。主要发现是,当受试者在前一次试验(试验t - 1)中判定刺激是同时出现的,且本次试验(试验t)的SOA略大于试验t - 1或与之相等时,不同顺序的试验比相同顺序的试验具有优势。当试验之间刺激的离心率发生变化但方向不变时(实验2),不同顺序试验的优势消失;而当刺激显示在中心位置且不太可能引发方向感时(实验4),该优势仍然存在。当试验t - 1中的异步性较小且未被察觉时(实验3),该优势依然能够被观察到。这些发现可以通过一种在时间和空间上精确规划的注意力转移来解释,这种转移偶然间使受试者能够检测到屏幕上孤立的刺激,从而帮助他们检测到异步性。