Publication year
2017Number of pages
1 p.
Source
Journal of Vision, 17, 10, (2017), pp. 144ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
SW OZ DCC SMN
PI Group Predictive Brain
Journal title
Journal of Vision
Volume
vol. 17
Issue
iss. 10
Languages used
English (eng)
Page start
p. 144
Subject
Action, intention, and motor control; DI-BCB_DCC_Theme 2: Perception, Action and ControlAbstract
Visual information that is relevant for an observer can be prioritized for access to awareness (Gayet et al., 2014). Here we investigate whether information that became relevant due to extensive training is prioritized for awareness. Participants performed in 3-day speed discrimination training involving dots moving in two directions, of which one was task-relevant (the attended direction) and the other was task-irrelevant (the ignored direction). Before and after training, we measured detection times for reporting the location of moving dots that were initially suppressed from awareness by continuous flash suppression (a method which is often used to assess prioritization for access to awareness called breaking continuous flash suppression; b-CFS). We hypothesized that b-CFS durations for the attended direction would selectively decrease after training. We also measured motion coherence thresholds for the attended, ignored and a neutral motion direction before and after training. Results show that perceptual learning took place: during training, speed discrimination of the attended motion direction became increasingly better. Also, coherence thresholds for the attended motion direction decreased after training, while thresholds for ignored and neutral motion directions were unaffected. B-CFS durations decreased after training for all three motion directions, revealing no selective decrease for the previously attended motion. A follow-up experiment showed that b-CFS durations also decreased after three days without training, revealing that perceptual learning did not cause the general decrease in b-CFS durations. We conclude that information that has become relevant due to extensive training is not prioritized for access to awareness. Our experiments do show, however, that b-CFS durations decrease for stimuli that are shown in succession, even when measurements are separated by several days. The latter has important consequences for studies applying b-CFS to assess access to awareness. Gayet, S., Van der Stigchel, S., & Paffen, C. L. E. (2014). Front Psychol, 5, 460. Meeting abstract presented at VSS 2017.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [226841]
- Donders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging [3585]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [28468]
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