Laboratory of Psychophysics, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Lausanne, Switzerland.
Department of Psychology, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH, USA.
J Vis. 2023 Jan 3;23(1):9. doi: 10.1167/jov.23.1.9.
How does the visual system represent continuity in the constantly changing visual input? A recent proposal is that vision is serially dependent: Stimuli seen a moment ago influence what we perceive in the present. In line with this, recent frameworks suggest that the visual system anticipates whether an object seen at one moment is the same as the one seen a moment ago, binding visual representations across consecutive perceptual episodes. A growing body of work supports this view, revealing signatures of serial dependence in many diverse visual tasks. Yet, the variety of disparate findings and interpretations calls for a more general picture. Here, we survey the main paradigms and results over the past decade. We also focus on the challenge of finding a relationship between serial dependence and the concept of "object identity," taking centuries-long history of research into account. Among the seemingly contrasting findings on serial dependence, we highlight common patterns that may elucidate the nature of this phenomenon and attempt to identify questions that are unanswered.
视觉系统如何在不断变化的视觉输入中表示连续性?最近的一个观点是,视觉是序列依赖的:刚才看到的刺激会影响我们当前的感知。与此一致,最近的框架表明,视觉系统会预测当前看到的物体是否与刚才看到的物体相同,从而在连续的感知事件中绑定视觉表示。越来越多的工作支持这一观点,在许多不同的视觉任务中揭示了序列依赖的特征。然而,各种不同的发现和解释需要更全面的描述。在这里,我们调查了过去十年中的主要范式和结果。我们还关注在序列依赖和“物体身份”概念之间找到关系的挑战,同时考虑到这一概念的长期研究历史。在关于序列依赖的看似相互矛盾的发现中,我们强调了常见的模式,这些模式可能阐明了这一现象的本质,并试图确定尚未回答的问题。