Shared attentional resources for global and local motion processing

被引:10
|
作者
Bulakowski, Paul F. [1 ]
Bressler, David W. [1 ]
Whitney, David [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Davis, Dept Psychol, Davis, CA 95616 USA
来源
JOURNAL OF VISION | 2007年 / 7卷 / 10期
关键词
attention; spatial scale; global; local; motion perception; integration; segmentation;
D O I
10.1167/7.10.10
中图分类号
R77 [眼科学];
学科分类号
100212 ;
摘要
One of the most important aspects of visual attention is its flexibility; our attentional "window" can be tuned to different spatial scales, allowing us to perceive large-scale global patterns and local features effortlessly. We investigated whether the perception of global and local motion competes for a common attentional resource. Subjects viewed arrays of individual moving Gabors that group to produce a global motion percept when subjects attended globally. When subjects attended locally, on the other hand, they could identify the direction of individual uncrowded Gabors. Subjects were required to devote their attention toward either scale of motion or divide it between global and local scales. We measured direction discrimination as a function of the validity of a precue, which was varied in opposite directions for global and local motion such that when the precue was valid for global motion, it was invalid for local motion and vice versa. There was a trade-off between global and local motion thresholds, such that increasing the validity of precues at one spatial scale simultaneously reduced thresholds at that spatial scale but increased thresholds at the other spatial scale. In a second experiment, we found a similar pattern of results for static-oriented Gabors: Attending to local orientation information impaired the subjects' ability to perceive globally defined orientation and vice versa. Thresholds were higher for orientation compared to motion, however, suggesting that motion discrimination in the first experiment was not driven by orientation information alone but by motion-specific processing. The results of these experiments demonstrate that a shared attentional resource flexibly moves between different spatial scales and allows for the perception of both local and global image features, whether these features are defined by motion or orientation.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Motion perception in global versus local attentional modes
    Duke, CC
    Crewther, SG
    Lawson, ML
    Henry, L
    Kiely, PM
    West, SJ
    Crewther, DP
    AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF OPHTHALMOLOGY, 1998, 26 : S114 - S116
  • [2] Searching for Life Motion Signals: Visual Search Asymmetry in Local but Not Global Biological-Motion Processing
    Wang, Li
    Zhang, Kan
    He, Sheng
    Jiang, Yi
    PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2010, 21 (08) : 1083 - 1089
  • [3] Does attentional selectivity in global/local processing improve discretely or gradually?
    Huebner, Ronald
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2014, 5
  • [4] Attentional blink in global versus local attentional modes
    Lawson, ML
    Crewther, DP
    Duke, CC
    Henry, L
    Kiely, PM
    West, SJ
    Crewther, SG
    AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF OPHTHALMOLOGY, 1998, 26 : S88 - S90
  • [5] Attentional modulation of motion-in-depth processing
    Gray, R
    VISION RESEARCH, 2000, 40 (09) : 1041 - 1050
  • [6] Impaired global, and compensatory local, biological motion processing in people with high levels of autistic traits
    van boxtel, Jeroen J. A.
    Lu, Hongjing
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2013, 4
  • [7] Local Motion Pooling Is Continuous, Global Motion Perception Is Discrete
    Green, Marshall L.
    Pratte, Michael S.
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-HUMAN PERCEPTION AND PERFORMANCE, 2022, 48 (01) : 52 - 63
  • [8] Creativity-Related Hemispheric Selective Processing: Correlations on Global and Local Levels of Attentional Set
    Razumnikova, O. M.
    Volf, N. V.
    CREATIVITY RESEARCH JOURNAL, 2015, 27 (04) : 394 - 399
  • [9] Temporal processing of global and local information varies with global precedence
    Lawson, ML
    Crewther, SG
    Blume-Tari, A
    Guminsky, M
    Perdikeas, N
    Roebuck, G
    Simmonds, S
    Crewther, DP
    CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL OPHTHALMOLOGY, 2002, 30 (03) : 221 - 226
  • [10] Self-organized pattern formation:: experimental dissection of motion detection and motion integration by variation of attentional spread
    Hock, HS
    Park, CL
    Schöner, G
    VISION RESEARCH, 2002, 42 (08) : 991 - 1003