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  5. Pre-Exposure to Moving Form Enhances Static Form Sensitivity
 
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2009
Zweitveröffentlichung
Artikel
Verlagsversion

Pre-Exposure to Moving Form Enhances Static Form Sensitivity

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Hauptpublikation
file.pdf
CC BY 4.0 International
Format: Adobe PDF
Size: 413.31 KB
TUDa URI
tuda/12299
URN
urn:nbn:de:tuda-tuprints-281858
DOI
10.26083/tuprints-00028185
Autor:innen
Wallis, Thomas S. A. ORCID 0000-0001-7431-4852
Williams, Mark A.
Arnold, Derek H.
Kurzbeschreibung (Abstract)

Background

Motion-defined form can seem to persist briefly after motion ceases, before seeming to gradually disappear into the background. Here we investigate if this subjective persistence reflects a signal capable of improving objective measures of sensitivity to static form.

Methodology/Principal Findings

We presented a sinusoidal modulation of luminance, masked by a background noise pattern. The sinusoidal luminance modulation was usually subjectively invisible when static, but visible when moving. We found that drifting then stopping the waveform resulted in a transient subjective persistence of the waveform in the static display. Observers' objective sensitivity to the position of the static waveform was also improved after viewing moving waveforms, compared to viewing static waveforms for a matched duration. This facilitation did not occur simply because movement provided more perspectives of the waveform, since performance following pre-exposure to scrambled animations did not match that following pre-exposure to smooth motion. Observers did not simply remember waveform positions at motion offset, since removing the waveform before testing reduced performance.

Conclusions/Significance

Motion processing therefore interacts with subsequent static visual inputs in a way that can improve performance in objective sensitivity measures. We suggest that the brief subjective persistence of motion-defined forms that can occur after motion offsets is a consequence of the decay of a static form signal that has been transiently enhanced by motion processing.

Sprache
Englisch
DDC
100 Philosophie und Psychologie > 150 Psychologie
600 Technik, Medizin, angewandte Wissenschaften > 610 Medizin, Gesundheit
Institution
Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Darmstadt
Ort
Darmstadt
Titel der Zeitschrift / Schriftenreihe
PLoS ONE
Jahrgang der Zeitschrift
4
Heftnummer der Zeitschrift
12
ISSN
1932-6203
Verlag
PLOS
Ort der Erstveröffentlichung
San Francisco, California, US
Publikationsjahr der Erstveröffentlichung
2009
Verlags-DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0008324
PPN
541424564

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