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Ch 11 1st set of notes

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Keep it secret (don't tell anyone) ... Retinal receptors can resolve flicker rates up to several hundred cycles per second (cps) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ch 11 1st set of notes


1
Ch 11 (1st set of notes)
  • Psyc 317

2
pick a card any card!
  • Select one only of these six face cards.
  • Keep it secret (dont tell anyone)
  • I will now present five cards and the one you
    picked will be missing.
  • Ready?

3
Yours is missing isnt it?
  • Whats the secret?
  • You may have forgotten to check if the other
    cards from earlier are still here.
  • Actually, none of the above cards were present on
    the previous slide.
  • Moral we perceive not a scene but the gist of a
    scene.

4
Time the neglected dimension in perception
  • The assumption that retinal image processing is
    pointilistic, along with the usual procedures for
    studying snapshot vision (chin-rest, muscle
    relaxants, ultrabrief stimuli, etc.) has led
    until recently to a general neglect of the
    temporal parameters of visual perception.
  • When time was brought into account, it was often
    a matter of adding up snapshots (as in the old
    reel films).
  • But there is good reason to think of perception
    as the perception of events just as much as
    perception of objects.
  • In fact, actions are particular kinds of events
  • Also, event perception involves object perception
  • Perception tells us about what is happening to
    or around me as also about who/what is doing
    what to whom/what
  • Events point to future events (in ways that
    objects alone do not)
  • Events are relations among objects and actions
  • Events are series of stimuli that unfold over
    time

5
Constant Change is Necessary for Perception
  • In fact, the necessity of change for perception
    to occur has long been demonstrated.
  • Starting in the 1950s, it was shown that a
    perfectly stabilized retinal image leads to
    uniform blur and effective blindness.
  • For vision, there must be variations in
    illumination over time, as also spatial variation
    in the intensity of light (e.g. patterns of
    edges)
  • The technique involves mounting tiny projectors
    onto contact lenses, so that every motion of the
    eye produces a corresponding (synchronized)
    motion of the retinal image.
  • The result is that, no matter how the eye moves,
    the retinal image falls on the exact same part of
    the retina.
  • Over a period of seconds, the entire visual field
    disappears from consciousness, with colors fading
    and contours falling away.
  • Flickering a stabilized image will allow it once
    again to reappear.

6
Microsaccades tiny eye movements that make still
objects visible
  • A saccade is a jerking movement of the eye.
  • Regular saccades happen when we flit our eyes
    from point A to point B.
  • In addition, the eyes, even when intentionally
    fixated on a stationary object, also slowly
    drift
  • We regularly if unconsciously revert our eyes to
    the chosen fixation point.
  • Microsaccades are tiny jiggling movements that
    occur many times a second, even during successful
    fixation.
  • The result is that the retinal image is
    constantly destabilized, and thus visible.
  • The output of each retinal receptor, even during
    steady fixated vision, varies over time as the
    image shivers over the retina.
  • Microsaccades allow perception of stationary
    objects
  • They are a relatively late evolved mechanism not
    present in many animals, who can lose sight of
    objects not moving relative to them

7
Percepts dont happen all at once they emerge
over time
  • We live in the past.
  • The specious present of experience is in fact a
    laggard.
  • the owl of Minerva flies at dusk
  • In the graphic at left, a 1 ms stimulus (a flash)
    over a tiny retinal area, causing neural activity
    to begin (in graph below).
  • But this activity increases slowly, resulting in
    tiny delay of experience of the stimulus.
  • More importantly, the neural activity goes on for
    some time, making the experience of the 1 ms
    flash last much longer (100-400 ms!) than the
    flash itself
  • The falsely-long experience is called visible
    persistence and is thought to arise from the
    on-going neural activity.

Visible persistence can be thought of as a rival
to the iconic theory of the very short term
memory.
8
Visual Sensory Memory (iconic memory)
A Q 6 8 T P W 1 2 Y 6 L
  • Sperling (1960) Whole-report vs. Partial Report
  • whole report technique
  • subjects saw a display of letters for 50 msec
  • subjects then asked to recall the items
  • results subjects recalled 4 items
  • partial report technique
  • subjects saw display for 50 msec
  • 50 msec later subject heard a tone indicating the
    row of the display to be recalled
  • high pitched tone--top row
  • medium pitched tone--middle row
  • low pitched tone--bottom row
  • results subjects recalled 3-4 items (regardless
    of the row)
  • also, partial report advantage disappears if
    stimulus is masked
  • Implication
  • 9-12 items available in iconic memory - we see
    more than we remember!

Immediate Report 4 correct 33 of
array Immediate Cue of Row -3 correct implying
75 of array available
9
Sperlings Results Partial Report and Iconic
Memory
  • So why are only 4 items recalled in whole report
    technique?
  • One idea the image of the items fades so
    rapidly that a person can only report 4 items
    before the rest of it fades from iconic memory
  • To test this hypothesis, Sperling varied the
    delay between the offset of the letter matrix
    display and the onset of the tonal cue
  • although 80 of the matrix could be reported when
    the cue was presented immediately, only about 50
    could be reported after ¼ of a second
  • after about ½ second, recall had fallen to the
    rather meager levels seen in the whole-report
    condition
  • the entire matrix was available initially, it
    faded rapidly, and was gone within about 500 ms

10
Characteristics of Iconic Memory
  • Large Capacity
  • Up to 17 letters, up to 2 seconds (although
    duration is typically briefer, 500 milliseconds
    to 1 second)
  • Capacity depends on stimulus conditions
  • dark fields enhance, bright pre and post
    fields cut down duration
  • Spontaneous Decay and Potential to be Erased
  • Loss of info due to spontaneous decay (rather
    than interference)
  • Decay begins at onset of target, not offset
    (DiLollo, 1980)
  • Information can also be lost due to a following
    stimulus acting as a mask (Breitmeyer Ganz,
    1976 Turvey, 1973)
  • Display followed by location cue ( _ or ?)
    circle wipes out target
  • Precategorical Representation
  • Initially thought to be a physical representation
    as selection of items on physical characteristics
    (ex. color) possible but not on semantic
    characteristics (digits vs. letters) (Sperling ,
    1960).
  • This has been challenged there may be some
    semantic info in iconic memory

11
Communicating over the vast expanse of the Brain
  • It takes between 10-50 ms for visual signals to
    reach the thalamus (LGN).
  • It takes another 20-50 ms for them to reach the
    primary visual cortex (V1) in the occipital lobe.
  • It takes 50-100 ms for signals to get from V1 to
    the frontal centers involved in action and
    planning.
  • E.g. a red traffic light goes on red light
    reaches the retina a signal is sent out
  • 40 ms later it is in the LGN
  • 20 ms later it is in V1
  • 20 ms later it is in V4 (deals with color)
  • 40 ms later it is in the frontal planning centers
    (traffic light is only just seen). Some time
    also required to decide to act.
  • 10-15 ms is required to initiate a motor response
  • At 100 kph, you have already traveled 6 meters,
    and your foot is just beginning to move toward
    the brake pedal.
  • Unfortunately you may need to add the effects of
    alcohol and cell-phone distraction to get
    realistic timeframe.

12
Flash Lag Effect
  • The brain has mechanisms to compensate and
    (partly) correct for its slow rate of
    processing.
  • It can sometimes anticipate where stimuli will be
    in advance.
  • Its as if perception of smooth rotation is made
    possible by anticipation but no anticipation of
    changed location applies to the briefly flashed
    bars, so they are seen as behind, though they are
    actually perfectly horizontal.

Indeed, evidence exists that certain LGN cells in
cats that respond selectively to directional
motion require less input activity to do so when
they are receiving feedback from V1 cells. But
the higher centers must have had enough
information to develop an anticipatory
hypothesis (top-down)
13
Temporal Integration
  • Frame 1 and Frame 2 each contain twelve dots.
  • They are presented (for 1 ms only) one after
    another in the same location with a variable
    inter-stimulus interval (ISI)
  • If the ISI is short enough, the two patterns are
    integrated over time to produce the combined
    percept shown.
  • Subjects are asked to identify the location where
    there is no spot.
  • Results the longer the ISI, the worse subjects
    are at finding the missing dot.

With ISI from 0-50 ms, accuracy identifying the
missing dot is very high (subjects see one
pattern with 24 dots). At 100 ms, accuracy is
close to chance (4)
14
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15
Backward masking
  • If two stimuli are briefly presented one after
    another in the same location, the second of the
    two is perceived more accurately than the first
    (backward masking)
  • Bachman Allik (1976) used five shapes (at
    left), presented them for 10 ms, and asked
    subjects to identify them.
  • Presented together, stimulus recognizability was
    low.
  • Presented with a delay, stimulus recognizability
    varied as delay grew
  • Accuracy identifying the second rose
  • Accuracy identifying the first fell, but then
    picked up again for longer ISI.
  • Apparently, competition arises for processing
    resources between the two.

? first shape ? second shape ?
? notice the J-shaped masking curve
16
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17
Spatial Analysis Requires Time
  • Not only is stimulus change required for
    perception not only does the percept require
    time to arise but even spatial analysis of
    unchanging stimuli requires time.
  • Why cant we detect the global inconsistencies
    immediately in the Escher engraving Belvedere?
  • The reason seems to be that the fovea has only a
    very limited spatial range over which it can
    exercise is fine visual acuity.
  • This allows it to verify local consistency of
    depth cues.
  • To check for global inconsistencies, regions of
    the printed image must be compared.
  • Only by comparing different regions can the
    correct spatial analysis of a scene be achieved
  • Contrary to appearances, we do not see the whole
    at once
  • This is related to the illusion of complete
    perception.
  • It is also related to the idea that we perceive
    the gist of an entire scene.

18
Temporal Resolution and the Visual System
  • The sensitivity of the eye/brain to changes in
    illumination over time is highly variable, and
    depends on many factors.
  • Retinal receptors can resolve flicker rates up to
    several hundred cycles per second (cps).
  • The sensitivity of V1 neurons to change over time
    is much less
  • A rapidly flickering light will be fused in
    consciousness into one light at various rates of
    flash, depending on the state of the system
  • factors include currently level of dark or light
    adaptation intensity of the light distance of
    light from fovea wavelength composition retinal
    location stimulus size (see table 11.1 on p.
    337).
  • The critical fusion frequency (CFF) is the
    measured frequency below which subjects are not
    able to distinguish a flickering light from a
    constant light.
  • The CFF can fall anywhere between 10 and 60 cps.
  • at 10 cps, the light is on for 50 ms durations
  • At 50 cps, the light is on for about 20 ms
  • at 60 cps, the light is on for 8.3 ms durations

The best CFF (highest resolution) is with
light-adapted eye and a high-intensity stimulus
in the periphery (any wavelength)
19
Visual Pathways the Temporal Capacities of the
Visual System
  • Recall that there are two visual pathways dorsal
    (action) and ventral (perceptual), and that the
    difference originates in the magnocellular vs.
    the parvocellular retinal ganglion cells.
  • Recall too that neurons in magnocelllular system
    exhibit transient responses to stimuli, whereas
    the parvocellular exhibit sustained responses
  • What might these different responses signify
    functionally?
  • The magnocelllular system is largely responsible
    for time-keeping in vision.
  • Distinguishing one 50 ms flash from two 50 ms
    flashes separated by a 50 ms interval is easy
    unless there is a irrelevant distracting 50 ms
    flash anywhere else in the visual field within
    about 250 ms of the test flash. Why?
  • Leonard Singer (1997) varied the character of
    the distracting flash to tease apart the
    different roles of the magnocelllular and the
    parvocellular systems
  • Low-contrast flashes activate the magnocelllular
    system
  • Isoluminant flashes activate the parvocellular
    system
  • High-contrast flashes activate both systems
  • Low-contrast flashes disrupted accuracy for all
    kinds of test flashes whewreas accuracy for
    low-contrast test flashes were not disrupted by
    high-contrast or isoluminant distracters.
    What are the implications?

20
Seeing where before seeing what
  • seeing where something is happens quickly over
    time, many wheres perceived are motion
    perceived.
  • Thus we can often tell who someone is when they
    are seen only as a walking silhouette (we
    recognize their individual gait, which is a
    moving or where stimulus).
  • You can see a vehicle driving towards you from a
    long way away, well before you can tell its make,
    or even whether its a car or truck. Expert bird
    watchers rely on movement patterns rather than
    colour.
  • Displays of randomly moving small bars can be
    manipulated (so that some of the bars (say in the
    central region), while still changing directions
    randomly, yet do so in a synchronized way.
  • Even when the rate of synchonized changes of
    direction is 50 cps (every 20 ms) observers see
    the shape of the manipulated area, but cannot
    articulate how the the figure and the ground are
    different. (Unconscious?)
  • These synchronized stimulus changes support the
    idea that neural synchrony is the basis of the
    perceptual now, consciousness, and communication
    among brain regions
  • 20-60 cps oscillations of coincident neural
    firing may indicate that two brain regions are
    communicating about the same visual object

21
Dichoptic Masking Results mask and target
presented to different eyes
  • There is both forward and backward visible
    masking.
  • The difference is which stimulus masks or
    interferes with the other.
  • There is also simultaneous masking.
  • Forward masking is weakest, occurring only if the
    first stimulus is 100ms or less from the second.
  • Due to visible persistence, this is more or less
    identical experientially to simultaneous masking.
    (why?)
  • There is also monoptic vs. dichoptic masking.
  • The results of dichoptic masking experiments are
    shown at left.
  • Dichoptic masking cannot be accounted for by
    early or retinal processing (why?)

22
Motion Smear the result of visible
persistence
Wag a finger in front of your face. What do you
see? A one finger at each end of the motion, and
a smear in between.
  • The two fingers perceived (when only one is
    waved), and the smear are the result of visible
    persistence.
  • If you wave two fingers, it becomes even more
    difficult to count the apparent fingers, which
    become super-imposed on each other and difficult
    to disentangle perceptually.
  • The smear interferes with object identification
    (shape, even colour) but it assists in projecting
    location (determining trajectory)
  • In the dark, motion smear is even greater.
    (Why?)
  • When motion is predictable, smear is suppressed.

23
Perceptual Stability
Perception over time can be seen as a tension
between opposing forces perceptual stability and
perceptual plasticity
  • Consider a constant tone that is interrupted, in
    one condition by silence, in others by an
    interval of white noise.
  • The tone is perceived as absent during the
    silence, but it can retain a phenomenal
    presence during the white noise.
  • Whether the tone is perceive in the interval of
    noise actually depends on what follows the
    interval.
  • If the tone picks up after the interval, it is
    perceived as having been there all along. This is
    called the auditory continuity illusion (phonemic
    restoration)
  • Compare the phenomenal presence of occluded
    objects in amodal completion

24
Perceptual plasticitycontext affects visual
motion
  • If subjects are presented with Frame 1, then
    Frame 2 (in row A, at right), they experience a
    black dot flashing on and off beside a grey
    square.
  • If moving dots are added to an otherwise
    identical display (row B), subjects now perceive
    the target black dot as moving, and indeed
    disappearing behind the grey square.
  • Motion is induced in the target dot by apparent
    motion in the surrounding context!

Id like anicetea said in winter or summer
25
Perception of Time the now and the flow.
  • The perceptual now (also called the subjective
    now, or the specious present) is a perpetual
    late-arriver.
  • James called it the saddle-back of time with a
    certain length of its own, on which we sit
    perched, and from which we look in two directions
    into time (1890)
  • But we also perceive time as passing, as flowing
    past, as not remaining present. This is complex,
    involving at least three aspects
  • duration estimation
  • order or sequence in time (perceiving
    simultaneity and successiveness)
  • planning of ordered sequences of events
  • We can achieve duration estimation either by
    biological clocks (relying on dedicated brain
    mechanisms) or by cognitive clocks (where time is
    read off cognitive processes, rather than a
    monitored directly

26
Suprachiasmatic Nucleus
The SCN of the hypothalamus (located just above
the optic chiasm) is the basis of the biological
clocks that maintain circadian rhythms
  • The sleep-wake cycle is the obvious biological
    regularity that has a basis in neural tissue with
    temporal properties.
  • Human circadian sleep-cycle is slightly longer
    than 24 hrs. Without resetting of our clock each
    day (typically by exposure to sunlight), our days
    would be 25 hrs
  • The pituitary hormone melatonin can also reset
    the circadian clock (Zeitgeber)
  • There are in fact several biological clocks,
    regulating periodic changes in blood pressure,
    body temperature, pulse, as well as feeding and
    mating behavior in animals.
    Entrainment is resetting.
  • Other cycles have longer periods estrus,
    menstruation, hibernation, etc.

27
Short Term Timers
28
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