Aftereffects have been documented for a variety of perceptual categories spanning from body gender to facial emotion, thus becoming an important tool in the study of high-level vision and its neural bases. We examined whether the perceived valence of a complex scene is subject to aftereffects, by observing the participants' evaluation of the valence of a test picture preceded by a different picture. For this study, we employed an adaptation paradigm with positive and negative images used as adapters, and positive, negative, and neutral images used as tests. Our results show that adaptation to complex emotional pictures induces assimilative aftereffects: participants judged neutral tests more positively following positive adapters and more negatively following negative adapters. This depended on the prolonged adaptation phase (10 s), as the results of a second experiment, in which adapters lasted for 500 ms, did not show aftereffects. In addition, the results show that assimilative aftereffects of negative and positive adapters also manifested themselves on non-neutral (negative and positive) targets, providing evidence that the global emotional content of complex pictures is suitable to induce assimilative aftereffects.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00054 | DOI Listing |
J Nerv Ment Dis
July 2021
Department of Psychiatry, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, Colorado.
Background: Throughout life, individuals are bombarded by countless emotion-generating messages. Certain of these messages, for example, some insults, admonitions, rejections, challenges, or insightful declarations, can be viewed as "infective." Infective messages shock, puncture, adhere, disturb, and generate discernable host responses that assimilate, accommodate, or repel the intruding messages.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychon Bull Rev
August 2021
Imaging Center for Integrated Body, Mind and Culture Research, National Taiwan University, No.49, Fanglan Rd., Da'an Dist., Taipei, 10617, Taiwan, Republic of China.
Sequential effects are prominent and pervasive phenomena that exist in most perceptual judgments. Of importance, these effects reflect dynamic aspects in our judgment bias induced by the recent context. When making successive judgments in response to a sequence of stimuli, two opposing consequences have frequently been observed: assimilation effects - current stimuli judged as being closer to preceding stimuli than they actually are, and contrast effects - current stimuli judged as being further from preceding stimuli than they actually are.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAtten Percept Psychophys
October 2020
Institute of Traffic and Engineering Psychology, German Police University, Zum Roten Berge 18-24, 48165, Münster, Germany.
In line with the theory of event coding, many studies on tool use show that perceived visual and haptic information interacts with action execution. In two experiments, we investigated the temporal persistence of after-effects within an event file, and after-effects in temporally overlapping event files with the n-1 replication task. Each trial consisted of two phases: In phase 1, participants moved a cursor with a pen on a covered tablet while a gain varied the relation between hand and cursor amplitude (Experiment 1).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFQ J Exp Psychol (Hove)
June 2020
Department of Cognitive Neuropsychology, Tilburg University, Tilburg, The Netherlands.
Humans quickly adapt to variations in the speech signal. Adaptation may surface as , a learning effect driven by error-minimisation between a visual face and an ambiguous auditory speech signal, or as , a contrastive aftereffect driven by the acoustic clarity of the sound. Here, we examined whether these aftereffects occur for vowel identity and voice gender.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAtten Percept Psychophys
May 2020
Macquarie University, Macquarie Park, Australia.
Decisional carryover refers to the tendency to report a current stimulus as being similar to a prior stimulus. In this article, we assess decisional carryover in the context of temporal judgments. Participants performed a temporal bisection task wherein a probe between a long and short reference duration (Experiment 1) was presented on every trial.
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