Hidden by bias: how standard psychophysical procedures conceal crucial aspects of peripheral visual appearance
The perception of a target depends on other stimuli surrounding it in time and space. This contextual modulation is ubiquitous in visual perception, and is usually quantified by measuring performance on sets of highly similar stimuli. Implicit or explicit comparisons among the stimuli may, however,...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Scientific reports 2021-02, Vol.11 (1), p.4095-4095, Article 4095 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The perception of a target depends on other stimuli surrounding it in time and space. This contextual modulation is ubiquitous in visual perception, and is usually quantified by measuring performance on sets of highly similar stimuli. Implicit or explicit comparisons among the stimuli may, however, inadvertently bias responses and conceal strong variability of target appearance. Here, we investigated the influence of contextual stimuli on the perception of a repeating pattern (a line triplet), presented in the visual periphery. In the
neutral
condition, the triplet was presented a single time to capture its minimally biased perception. In the
similar
and
dissimilar
conditions, it was presented within stimulus sets composed of lines similar to the triplet, and distinct shapes, respectively. The majority of observers reported perceiving a line pair in the
neutral
and
dissimilar
conditions, revealing ‘redundancy masking’, the reduction of the perceived number of repeating items. In the
similar
condition, by contrast, the number of lines was overestimated. Our results show that the
similar
context did not reveal redundancy masking which was only observed in the
neutral
and
dissimilar
context. We suggest that the influence of contextual stimuli has inadvertently concealed this crucial aspect of peripheral appearance. |
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ISSN: | 2045-2322 2045-2322 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41598-021-83325-7 |