Authors
José Eduardo Marques-Carneiro, Patrik Polgári, Estelle Koning, Emilie Seyller, Brice Martin, Erik Van der Burg, Anne Giersch
Publication date
2020/8
Journal
Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics
Volume
82
Pages
2821-2836
Publisher
Springer US
Description
Learning and imitating a complex motor action requires to visually follow complex movements, but conscious perception seems too slow for such tasks. Recent findings suggest that visual perception has a higher temporal resolution at an unconscious than at a conscious level. Here we investigate whether high-temporal resolution in visual perception relies on prediction mechanisms and attention shifts based on recently experienced sequences of visual information. To that aim we explore sequential effects during four different simultaneity/asynchrony discrimination tasks. Two stimuli are displayed on each trial with varying stimulus onset asynchronies (SOA). Subjects decide whether the stimuli are simultaneous or asynchronous and give manual responses. The main finding is an advantage for different-order over same-order trials, when subjects decided that stimuli had been simultaneous on Trial t − 1 …
Total citations
202120222023354
Scholar articles
JE Marques-Carneiro, P Polgári, E Koning, E Seyller… - Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 2020