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      You see what you look for: Targets and distractors in visual search can cause opposing serial dependencies

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          Abstract

          Visual perception is, at any given moment, strongly influenced by its temporal context—what stimuli have recently been perceived and in what surroundings. We have previously shown that to-be-ignored items produce a bias upon subsequent perceptual decisions that acts in parallel with other biases induced by attended items. However, our previous investigations were confined to biases upon the perceived orientation of a visual search target, and it is unclear whether these biases influence perceptual decisions in a more general sense. Here, we test whether the biases from visual search targets and distractors affect the perceived orientation of a neutral test line, one that is neither a target nor a distractor. To do so, we asked participants to search for an oddly oriented line among distractors and report its location for a few trials and next presented a test line irrelevant to the search task. Participants were asked to report the orientation of the test line. Our results indicate that in tasks involving visual search, targets induce a positive bias upon a neutral test line if their orientations are similar, whereas distractors produce an attractive bias for similar test lines and a repulsive bias if the orientations of the test line and the average orientation of the distractors are far apart in feature space. In sum, our results show that both attentional role and proximity in feature space between previous and current stimuli determine the direction of biases in perceptual decisions.

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            Discrete fixed-resolution representations in visual working memory.

            Limits on the storage capacity of working memory significantly affect cognitive abilities in a wide range of domains, but the nature of these capacity limits has been elusive. Some researchers have proposed that working memory stores a limited set of discrete, fixed-resolution representations, whereas others have proposed that working memory consists of a pool of resources that can be allocated flexibly to provide either a small number of high-resolution representations or a large number of low-resolution representations. Here we resolve this controversy by providing independent measures of capacity and resolution. We show that, when presented with more than a few simple objects, human observers store a high-resolution representation of a subset of the objects and retain no information about the others. Memory resolution varied over a narrow range that cannot be explained in terms of a general resource pool but can be well explained by a small set of discrete, fixed-resolution representations.
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              Serial dependence in visual perception

              Visual input often arrives in a noisy and discontinuous stream, owing to head and eye movements, occlusion, lighting changes, and many other factors. Yet the physical world is generally stable—objects and physical characteristics rarely change spontaneously. How then does the human visual system capitalize on continuity in the physical environment over time? Here we show that visual perception is serially dependent, using both prior and present input to inform perception at the present moment. Using an orientation judgment task, we found that even when visual input changes randomly over time, perceived orientation is strongly and systematically biased toward recently seen stimuli. Further, the strength of this bias is modulated by attention and tuned to the spatial and temporal proximity of successive stimuli. These results reveal a serial dependence in perception characterized by a spatiotemporally tuned, orientation-selective operator—which we call a continuity field—that may promote visual stability over time.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                J Vis
                J Vis
                jovi
                JOVI
                Journal of Vision
                The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology
                1534-7362
                01 September 2021
                September 2021
                : 21
                : 10
                : 3
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Icelandic Vision Lab, Faculty of Psychology, University of Iceland, Reykjavík, Iceland
                [2 ]Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behavior, Radboud University, Nijmegen, Netherlands
                [3 ]Icelandic Vision Lab, Faculty of Psychology, University of Iceland, Reykjavík, Iceland
                [4 ]Sciences Cognitives et Sciences Affectives (SCALab), Université de Lille, Lille, France
                [5 ]Icelandic Vision Lab, Faculty of Psychology, University of Iceland, Reykjavík, Iceland
                [6 ]School of Psychology, National Research University, Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russian Federation
                Author notes
                Article
                JOV-07868-2021
                10.1167/jov.21.10.3
                8419872
                34468704
                a3814fec-c947-4dc2-b07e-8ee8b1d17263
                Copyright 2021 The Authors

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 06 August 2021
                : 06 February 2021
                Page count
                Pages: 13
                Categories
                Article
                Article

                visual search,perceptual bias,visual attention
                visual search, perceptual bias, visual attention

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