Time for a change: What dominance durations reveal about adaptation effects in the perception of a bi-stable reversible figure

The effect of adaptation on the perception of a reversible figure was examined in the context of the so-called “reverse-bias effect” in which prolonged exposure to an un ambiguous version of a bi-stable ambiguous stimulus serves to bias an observer to report the alternative version of the subsequent...

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Veröffentlicht in:Attention, perception & psychophysics perception & psychophysics, 2015-04, Vol.77 (3), p.867-882
Hauptverfasser: Toppino, Thomas C., Long, Gerald M.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The effect of adaptation on the perception of a reversible figure was examined in the context of the so-called “reverse-bias effect” in which prolonged exposure to an un ambiguous version of a bi-stable ambiguous stimulus serves to bias an observer to report the alternative version of the subsequently viewed ambiguous stimulus. Exposure to the unambiguous stimulus presumably selectively adapts and weakens the neural structures underlying that particular interpretation of the ambiguous figure. We extended previous research by examining the dominance durations for the two alternatives of the reversible figure (i.e., how long each alternative was perceived when it was dominant) in addition to the measures of response rate and choice preference used by other researchers. We replicated earlier findings with the previously used measures. Interestingly, adaptation with an unambiguous version of the ambiguous stimulus produced an asymmetrical effect on the dominance durations of the subsequently presented ambiguous stimulus, relative to a no-adaptation control. The dominance durations were lengthened for the perceptual organization that was the opposite of the adaptation stimulus while they were relatively unaffected for the perceptual organization that was the same as the adaptation stimulus. Our findings are consistent with the argument that adaptation effects play an important role in perceptual bistability. The asymmetrical dominance-duration findings further suggest that adaptation operates in a perceptual system in which the alternative perceptual representations of an ambiguous figure reciprocally inhibit one another via cross-inhibitory processes, consistent with views developed in other forms of bistable perception (e.g., binocular rivalry).
ISSN:1943-3921
1943-393X
DOI:10.3758/s13414-014-0809-x