Graduate Program in Neuroscience, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
J Neurophysiol. 2021 Mar 1;125(3):977-991. doi: 10.1152/jn.00630.2020. Epub 2021 Feb 3.
Smooth pursuit eye movements and visual motion perception rely on the integration of current sensory signals with past experience. Experience shapes our expectation of current visual events and can drive eye movement responses made in anticipation of a target, such as anticipatory pursuit. Previous research revealed consistent effects of expectation on anticipatory pursuit-eye movements follow the expected target direction or speed-and contrasting effects on motion perception, but most studies considered either eye movement or perceptual responses. The current study directly compared effects of direction expectation on perception and anticipatory pursuit within the same direction discrimination task to investigate whether both types of responses are affected similarly or differently. Observers ( = 10) viewed high-coherence random-dot kinematograms (RDKs) moving rightward and leftward with a probability of 50%, 70%, or 90% in a given block of trials to build up an expectation of motion direction. They were asked to judge motion direction of interleaved low-coherence RDKs (0%-15%). Perceptual judgements were compared with changes in anticipatory pursuit eye movements as a function of probability. Results show that anticipatory pursuit velocity scaled with probability and followed direction expectation (attraction bias), whereas perceptual judgments were biased opposite to direction expectation (repulsion bias). Control experiments suggest that the repulsion bias in perception was not caused by retinal slip induced by anticipatory pursuit, or by motion adaptation. We conclude that direction expectation can be processed differently for perception and anticipatory pursuit. We show that expectations about motion direction that are based on long-term trial history affect perception and anticipatory pursuit differently. Whereas anticipatory pursuit direction was coherent with the expected motion direction (attraction bias), perception was biased opposite to the expected direction (repulsion bias). These opposite biases potentially reveal different ways in which perception and action utilize prior information and support the idea of different information processing for perception and pursuit.
平滑追踪眼动和视觉运动知觉依赖于当前感觉信号与过去经验的整合。经验塑造了我们对当前视觉事件的期望,并可以驱动在预期目标时做出的眼动反应,例如预期追踪。先前的研究表明,期望对预期追踪-眼动的影响是一致的,即眼动跟随预期目标的方向或速度,而对运动知觉的影响则相反,但大多数研究只考虑了眼动或知觉反应。本研究在同一方向辨别任务中直接比较了方向期望对知觉和预期追踪的影响,以研究这两种类型的反应是否受到类似或不同的影响。观察者(n=10)观看以 50%、70%或 90%的概率向右和向左移动的高相干随机点运动图(RDK),以在给定的试验块中建立对运动方向的期望。他们被要求判断交错的低相干 RDK 的运动方向(0%-15%)。知觉判断与作为概率函数的预期追踪眼动变化进行比较。结果表明,预期追踪速度与概率成正比,并遵循方向期望(吸引偏差),而知觉判断则与方向期望相反(排斥偏差)。控制实验表明,知觉中的排斥偏差不是由预期追踪引起的视网膜滑移,也不是由运动适应引起的。我们得出结论,方向期望可以在知觉和预期追踪中以不同的方式进行处理。我们表明,基于长期试验历史的运动方向期望会对知觉和预期追踪产生不同的影响。虽然预期追踪方向与预期运动方向一致(吸引偏差),但知觉则与预期方向相反(排斥偏差)。这些相反的偏差可能揭示了知觉和动作利用先验信息的不同方式,并支持了知觉和追踪具有不同信息处理方式的观点。