Visual processing in rapid-chase systems: image processing, attention, and awareness

被引:28
作者
Schmidt, Thomas [1 ]
Haberkamp, Anke [1 ]
Veltkamp, G. Marina [1 ]
Weber, Andreas [1 ]
Seydell-Greenwald, Anna [2 ]
Schmidt, Filipp [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Kaiserslautern, Fac Social Sci, D-67633 Kaiserslautern, Germany
[2] Georgetown Univ, Washington, DC USA
关键词
visual perception; visual awareness; response priming; rapid-chase; feature-based attention; objects; phobias; lightness; TRACING SEQUENTIAL WAVES; TIME-COURSE; NEURAL REPRESENTATION; FEATURE-INTEGRATION; MOTOR ACTIVATION; MASKED STIMULI; FEEDFORWARD; CORTEX; COLOR; PERCEPTION;
D O I
10.3389/fpsyg.2011.00169
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Visual stimuli can be classified so rapidly that their analysis may be based on a single sweep of feedforward processing through the visuomotor system. Behavioral criteria for feedforward processing can be evaluated in response priming tasks where speeded pointing or keypress responses are performed toward target stimuli which are preceded by prime stimuli. We apply this method to several classes of complex stimuli. (1) When participants classify natural images into animals or non-animals, the time course of their pointing responses indicates that prime and target signals remain strictly sequential throughout all processing stages, meeting stringent behavioral criteria for feedforward processing (rapid-chase criteria). (2) Such priming effects are boosted by selective visual attention for positions, shapes, and colors, in a way consistent with bottom-up enhancement of visuomotor processing, even when primes cannot be consciously identified. (3) Speeded processing of phobic images is observed in participants specifically fearful of spiders or snakes, suggesting enhancement of feedforward processing by long-term perceptual learning. (4) When the perceived brightness of primes in complex displays is altered by means of illumination or transparency illusions, priming effects in speeded keypress responses can systematically contradict subjective brightness judgments, such that one prime appears brighter than the other but activates motor responses as if it was darker. We propose that response priming captures the output of the first feedforward pass of visual signals through the visuomotor system, and that this output lacks some characteristic features of more elaborate, recurrent processing. This way, visuomotor measures may become dissociated from several aspects of conscious vision. We argue that "fast" visuomotor measures predominantly driven by feedforward processing should supplement "slow" psychophysical measures predominantly based on visual awareness.
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 109 条
[21]   Towards a cognitive neuroscience of consciousness: basic evidence and a workspace framework [J].
Dehaene, S ;
Naccache, L .
COGNITION, 2001, 79 (1-2) :1-37
[22]  
Dehaene S., 2009, SeminairePoincare, VXll, P89
[23]   Competition for consciousness among visual events: The psychophysics of reentrant visual processes [J].
Di Lollo, V ;
Enns, JT ;
Rensink, RA .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-GENERAL, 2000, 129 (04) :481-507
[24]   Effects of masked stimuli on motor activation: Behavioral and electrophysiological evidence [J].
Eimer, M ;
Schlaghecken, F .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-HUMAN PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE, 1998, 24 (06) :1737-1747
[25]   Masking disrupts reentrant processing in human visual cortex [J].
Fahrenfort, J. J. ;
Scholte, H. S. ;
Lamme, V. A. F. .
JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2007, 19 (09) :1488-1497
[26]   The detection of fear-relevant stimuli: Are guns noticed as quickly as snakes? [J].
Fox, Elaine ;
Griggs, Laura ;
Mouchlianitis, Elias .
EMOTION, 2007, 7 (04) :691-696
[27]   The Amsterdam Library of Object Images [J].
Geusebroek, JM ;
Burghouts, GJ ;
Smeulders, AWM .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMPUTER VISION, 2005, 61 (01) :103-112
[28]   Brain states: Top-down influences in sensory processing [J].
Gilbert, Charles D. ;
Sigman, Mariano .
NEURON, 2007, 54 (05) :677-696
[29]   An anchoring theory of lightness perception [J].
Gilchrist, A ;
Kossyfidis, C ;
Bonato, F ;
Agostini, T ;
Cataliotti, J ;
Li, XJ ;
Spehar, B ;
Annan, V ;
Economou, E .
PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW, 1999, 106 (04) :795-834
[30]   The temporal correlation hypothesis of visual feature integration: Still alive and well [J].
Gray, CM .
NEURON, 1999, 24 (01) :31-47