Independent coding of object motion and position revealed by distinct contingent aftereffects

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Independent coding of object motion and position revealed by distinct contingent aftereffects. / Bulakowski, Paul F; Koldewyn, Kami; Whitney, David.
In: Vision Research, Vol. 47, No. 6, 03.2007, p. 810-817.

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Bulakowski PF, Koldewyn K, Whitney D. Independent coding of object motion and position revealed by distinct contingent aftereffects. Vision Research. 2007 Mar;47(6):810-817. Epub 2006 Dec 19. doi: 10.1016/j.visres.2006.10.020

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Bulakowski, Paul F ; Koldewyn, Kami ; Whitney, David. / Independent coding of object motion and position revealed by distinct contingent aftereffects. In: Vision Research. 2007 ; Vol. 47, No. 6. pp. 810-817.

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Independent coding of object motion and position revealed by distinct contingent aftereffects

AU - Bulakowski, Paul F

AU - Koldewyn, Kami

AU - Whitney, David

PY - 2007/3

Y1 - 2007/3

N2 - Despite several findings of perceptual asynchronies between object features, it remains unclear whether independent neuronal populations necessarily code these perceptually unbound properties. To examine this, we investigated the binding between an object's spatial frequency and its rotational motion using contingent motion aftereffects (MAE). Subjects adapted to an oscillating grating whose direction of rotation was paired with a high or low spatial frequency pattern. In separate adaptation conditions, we varied the moment when the spatial frequency change occurred relative to the direction reversal. After adapting to one stimulus, subjects made judgments of either the perceived MAE (rotational movement) or the position shift (instantaneous phase rotation) that accompanied the MAE. To null the spatial frequency-contingent MAE, motion reversals had to physically lag changes in spatial frequency during adaptation. To null the position shift that accompanied the MAE, however, no temporal lag between the attributes was required. This demonstrates that perceived motion and position can be perceptually misbound. Indeed, in certain conditions, subjects perceived the test pattern to drift in one direction while its position appeared shifted in the opposite direction. The dissociation between perceived motion and position of the same test pattern, following identical adaptation, demonstrates that distinguishable neural populations code for these object properties.

AB - Despite several findings of perceptual asynchronies between object features, it remains unclear whether independent neuronal populations necessarily code these perceptually unbound properties. To examine this, we investigated the binding between an object's spatial frequency and its rotational motion using contingent motion aftereffects (MAE). Subjects adapted to an oscillating grating whose direction of rotation was paired with a high or low spatial frequency pattern. In separate adaptation conditions, we varied the moment when the spatial frequency change occurred relative to the direction reversal. After adapting to one stimulus, subjects made judgments of either the perceived MAE (rotational movement) or the position shift (instantaneous phase rotation) that accompanied the MAE. To null the spatial frequency-contingent MAE, motion reversals had to physically lag changes in spatial frequency during adaptation. To null the position shift that accompanied the MAE, however, no temporal lag between the attributes was required. This demonstrates that perceived motion and position can be perceptually misbound. Indeed, in certain conditions, subjects perceived the test pattern to drift in one direction while its position appeared shifted in the opposite direction. The dissociation between perceived motion and position of the same test pattern, following identical adaptation, demonstrates that distinguishable neural populations code for these object properties.

KW - Color Perception

KW - Figural Aftereffect

KW - Humans

KW - Motion Perception

KW - Pattern Recognition, Visual

KW - Photic Stimulation

KW - Psychophysics

KW - Reaction Time

KW - Rotation

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.1016/j.visres.2006.10.020

DO - 10.1016/j.visres.2006.10.020

M3 - Article

C2 - 17280696

VL - 47

SP - 810

EP - 817

JO - Vision Research

JF - Vision Research

SN - 0042-6989

IS - 6

ER -