Reinforcement of perceptual inference: reward and punishment alter conscious visual perception during binocular rivalry

被引:30
作者
Wilbertz, Gregor [1 ]
van Slooten, Joanne [1 ]
Sterzer, Philipp [1 ]
机构
[1] Charite, Dept Psychiat & Psychotherapy, Visual Percept Lab, D-10117 Berlin, Germany
关键词
binocular rivalry; reward; punishment; perceptual inference; visual perception; MOTIVATIONAL INFLUENCES; EXTINCTION; FEAR; SUPPRESSION; DOMINANCE; AWARENESS; FIGURES; CORTEX; BRAIN; FACES;
D O I
10.3389/fpsyg.2014.01377
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Perception is an inferential process, which becomes immediately evident when sensory information is conflicting or ambiguous and thus allows for more than one perceptual interpretation. Thinking the idea of perception as inference through to the end results in a blurring of boundaries between perception and action selection, as perceptual inference implies the construction of a percept as an active process. Here we therefore wondered whether perception shares a key characteristic of action selection, namely that it is shaped by reinforcement learning. In two behavioral experiments, we used binocular rivalry to examine whether perceptual inference can be influenced by the association of perceptual outcomes with reward or punishment, respectively, in analogy to instrumental conditioning. Binocular rivalry was evoked by two orthogonal grating stimuli presented to the two eyes, resulting in perceptual alternations between the two gratings. Perception was tracked indirectly and objectively through a target detection task, which allowed us to preclude potential reporting biases. Monetary reward or punishments were given repeatedly during perception of only one of the two rivaling stimuli. We found an increase in dominance durations for the percept associated with reward, relative to the non-rewarded percept. In contrast, punishment led to an increase of the non-punished compared to a relative decrease of the punished percept. Our results show that perception shares key characteristics with action selection, in that it is influenced by reward and punishment in opposite directions, thus narrowing the gap between the conceptually separated domains of perception and action selection. We conclude that perceptual inference is an adaptive process that is shaped by its consequences.
引用
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 57 条
[1]   Here is looking at you: Emotional faces predominate in binocular rivalry [J].
Alpers, Georg W. ;
Gerdes, Antje B. M. .
EMOTION, 2007, 7 (03) :495-506
[2]   Binocular rivalry between emotional and neutral stimuli:: A validation using fear conditioning and EEG [J].
Alpers, GW ;
Ruhleder, M ;
Walz, N ;
Mühlberger, A ;
Pauli, P .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2005, 57 (01) :25-32
[3]   A value-driven mechanism of attentional selection [J].
Anderson, Brian A. .
JOURNAL OF VISION, 2013, 13 (03)
[4]   Value-driven attentional capture [J].
Anderson, Brian A. ;
Laurent, Patryk A. ;
Yantis, Steven .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2011, 108 (25) :10367-10371
[5]   The Visual Impact of Gossip [J].
Anderson, Eric ;
Siegel, Erika H. ;
Bliss-Moreau, Eliza ;
Barrett, Lisa Feldman .
SCIENCE, 2011, 332 (6036) :1446-1448
[6]   What you feel influences what you see: The role of affective feelings in resolving binocular rivalry [J].
Anderson, Eric ;
Siegel, Erika H. ;
Barrett, Lisa Feldman .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2011, 47 (04) :856-860
[7]  
[Anonymous], 1938, The behavior of organisms: An experimental analysis
[8]   A Dissociation of Performance and Awareness During Binocular Rivalry [J].
Baker, Daniel H. ;
Cass, John R. .
PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2013, 24 (12) :2563-2568
[9]   See what you want to see: Motivational influences on visual perception [J].
Balcetis, Emily ;
Dunning, David .
JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2006, 91 (04) :612-625
[10]   Subjective value determines initial dominance in binocular rivalry [J].
Balcetis, Emily ;
Dunning, David ;
Granot, Yael .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2012, 48 (01) :122-129