Revisiting the effects of configuration, predictability, and relevance on visual detection during interocular suppression.

Cognition

Department of Psychology & Cognitive Science Program, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, United States of America.

Published: September 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Statistical regularities and predictions can influence early visual processing, but studies show mixed results on their effects on detection.
  • In a series of three experiments using continuous flash suppression, findings indicated that valid configuration cues improved detection performance, while predictive cues had minimal impact on visibility and localization.
  • Experiment 3 revealed that relevance affected participants' sensitivity and response times, indicating that while predictivity aids post-detection factors, it does not enhance the actual detection process in the same way as relevant cues do.
  • Overall, the study suggests that the roles of predictability and relevance in visual processing are largely independent of one another.

Article Abstract

Statistical regularities and predictions can influence the earliest stages of visual processing. Studies examining their effects on detection, however, have yielded inconsistent results. In continuous flash suppression (CFS), where a static image projected to one eye is suppressed by a dynamic image presented to the other, the predictability of the suppressed signal may facilitate or delay detection. To identify the factors that differentiate these outcomes and dissociate the effects of expectation from those of behavioral relevance, we conducted three CFS experiments that addressed confounds related to the use of reaction time measures and complex images. In experiment 1, orientation recognition performance and visibility rates increased when a suppressed line segment completed a partial shape surrounding the CFS patch, demonstrating that valid configuration cues facilitate detection. In Experiment 2, however, predictive cues marginally affected visibility and did not modulate localization performance, challenging existing findings. In experiment 3, a relevance manipulation was introduced; participants pressed a key upon detecting lines of a particular orientation, ignoring the other possible orientation. Visibility and localization were enhanced for relevant orientations. Predictive cues modulated visibility, orientation recognition sensitivity, and response latencies, but not localization-an objective measure sensitive to partial breakthrough. Thus, while a consistent surround can strongly enhance detection during passive observation, predictive cueing primarily affects post-detection factors such as response readiness and recognition confidence. Relevance and predictability did not interact, suggesting that the contributions of these two processes to detection are mostly orthogonal.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2023.105506DOI Listing

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