Serial dependence effects have been observed using a variety of stimuli and tasks, revealing that the recent past can bias current percepts, leading to increased similarity between two. The aim of this study is to determine whether this temporal integration occurs in egocentric or allocentric coordinates. We asked participants to perform an orientation reproduction task using grating stimuli while the head was kept at a fixed position, or after a 40 degrees yaw rotation between trials, from left (-20 degrees) to right (+20 degrees), putting the egocentric and allocentric cues in conflict. Under these conditions, allocentric cues prevailed.

Perceptual History Acts in World-Centred Coordinates

Cicchini Guido Marco;
2021

Abstract

Serial dependence effects have been observed using a variety of stimuli and tasks, revealing that the recent past can bias current percepts, leading to increased similarity between two. The aim of this study is to determine whether this temporal integration occurs in egocentric or allocentric coordinates. We asked participants to perform an orientation reproduction task using grating stimuli while the head was kept at a fixed position, or after a 40 degrees yaw rotation between trials, from left (-20 degrees) to right (+20 degrees), putting the egocentric and allocentric cues in conflict. Under these conditions, allocentric cues prevailed.
2021
serial dependence
coordinate frames
head movement
predictive coding
perception
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/458170
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