An investigation of the spatial selectivity of the duration after-effect

Maarseveen, Jim, , Verstraten, Frans A.J., & Paffen, Chris L.E. (2017) An investigation of the spatial selectivity of the duration after-effect. Vision Research, 130, pp. 67-75.

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Description

Adaptation to the duration of a visual stimulus causes the perceived duration of a subsequently presented stimulus with a slightly different duration to be skewed away from the adapted duration. This pattern of repulsion following adaptation is similar to that observed for other visual properties, such as orientation, and is considered evidence for the involvement of duration-selective mechanisms in duration encoding. Here, we investigated whether the encoding of duration – by duration-selective mechanisms – occurs early on in the visual processing hierarchy. To this end, we investigated the spatial specificity of the duration after-effect in two experiments. We measured the duration after-effect at adapter-test distances ranging between 0 and 15° of visual angle and for within- and between-hemifield presentations. We replicated the duration after-effect: the test stimulus was perceived to have a longer duration following adaptation to a shorter duration, and a shorter duration following adaptation to a longer duration. Importantly, this duration after-effect occurred at all measured distances, with no evidence for a decrease in the magnitude of the after-effect at larger distances or across hemifields. This shows that adaptation to duration does not result from adaptation occurring early on in the visual processing hierarchy. Instead, it seems likely that duration information is a high-level stimulus property that is encoded later on in the visual processing hierarchy.

Impact and interest:

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ID Code: 247916
Item Type: Contribution to Journal (Journal Article)
Refereed: Yes
Additional Information: FV is funded by an Australian Council Discovery Project.
Measurements or Duration: 9 pages
Keywords: Adaptation, Duration after-effect, Duration perception, Temporal processing
DOI: 10.1016/j.visres.2016.11.003
ISSN: 0042-6989
Pure ID: 166711945
Copyright Owner: 2016 Elsevier Ltd
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Deposited On: 11 Apr 2024 05:07
Last Modified: 04 Jul 2024 18:17