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Separate motion-detecting mechanisms for first- and second-order patterns revealed by rapid forms of visual motion priming and motion after effect

Version 2 2024-03-12, 12:58
Version 1 2023-10-18, 09:03
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 12:58 authored by Andrea Pavan, Gianluca Campana, Michele Guerreschi, Mauro Manassi, Clara Casco
<p>Fast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous test pattern (R. Kanai & F. A. Verstraten, 2005). Depending on both the duration of the adapting stimulus (ranging from tens to hundreds of milliseconds) and the duration of the adaptation-test blank interval, the perceived direction of an ambiguous test pattern can be biased towards the same or the opposite direction of the adaptation pattern, resulting in rapid forms of motion priming or motion aftereffect respectively. These findings were obtained employing drifting luminance gratings. Many studies have shown that first-order motion (luminance-defined) and second-order motion (contrast-defined) stimuli are processed by separate mechanisms. We assessed whether these effects also exist within the second-order motion domain. Results show that fast adaptation to second-order motion biases the perceived direction of a subsequently presented second-order ambiguous test pattern with similar time courses to that obtained for first-order motion. To assess whether a single mechanism could account for these results, we ran a cross-order adaptation condition. Results showed little or no transfer between the two motion cues and probes, suggesting a degree of separation between the neural substrates subserving fast adaptation of first- and second-order motion. © ARVO.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Psychology (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Journal of Vision

Volume

9

Issue

11

Pages/Article Number

27

Publisher

Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO

ISSN

1534-7362

eISSN

1534-7362

Date Submitted

2014-11-19

Date Accepted

2014-11-19

Date of First Publication

2014-11-19

Date of Final Publication

2014-11-19

ePrints ID

15499