Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W4366606166> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W4366606166 endingPage "3875" @default.
- W4366606166 startingPage "3860" @default.
- W4366606166 abstract "What we see in the present is affected by what we saw in the recent past. Serial dependence, a bias making a current stimulus appear more similar to a previous one, has been indeed shown to be ubiquitous in vision. At the neural level, serial dependence is accompanied by a signature of stimulus history (i.e., past stimulus information) emerging from early visual-evoked activity. However, whether this neural signature effectively reflects the behavioral bias is unclear. Here we address this question by assessing the neural (electrophysiological) and behavioral signature of stimulus history in human subjects (both male and female), in the context of numerosity, duration, and size perception. First, our results show that while the behavioral effect is task-dependent, its neural signature also reflects task-irrelevant dimensions of a past stimulus, suggesting a partial dissociation between the mechanisms mediating the encoding of stimulus history and the behavioral bias itself. Second, we show that performing a task is not a necessary condition to observe the neural signature of stimulus history, but that in the presence of an active task such a signature is significantly amplified. Finally, and more importantly, we show that the pattern of brain activity in a relatively early latency window (starting at ∼35-65 ms after stimulus onset) significantly predicts the behavioral effect. Overall, our results thus demonstrate that the encoding of past stimulus information in neural signals does indeed reflect serial dependence, and that serial dependence occurs at a relatively early level of visual processing.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT What we perceive is determined not only by the information reaching our sensory organs, but also by the context in which the information is embedded. What we saw in the recent past (perceptual history) can indeed modulate the perception of a current stimulus in an attractive way, a bias that is ubiquitous in vision. Here we show that this bias can be predicted by the pattern of brain activity reflecting the encoding of past stimulus information, very early after the onset of a stimulus. This in turn suggests that the integration of past and present sensory information mediating the attractive bias occurs early in the visual processing stream, and likely involves early visual cortices." @default.
- W4366606166 created "2023-04-23" @default.
- W4366606166 creator A5002694807 @default.
- W4366606166 creator A5008006939 @default.
- W4366606166 creator A5084214279 @default.
- W4366606166 date "2023-04-21" @default.
- W4366606166 modified "2023-09-30" @default.
- W4366606166 title "Perceptual History Biases Are Predicted by Early Visual-Evoked Activity" @default.
- W4366606166 cites W1971725178 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2005556066 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2005990670 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2017108196 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2035912487 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2037504148 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2057409808 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2079775421 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2082661928 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2089442041 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2090948255 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2105668224 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2128495200 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2155744172 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2410480147 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2412809073 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2584260314 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2602885344 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2620926599 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2775481353 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2785298981 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2785810081 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2790825112 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2793152070 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2889679890 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2898750940 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2899247860 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2920510990 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2945556393 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2947945141 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2950432155 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2950885566 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2952506252 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2976252239 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2979277769 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2981273019 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2990911744 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2995022265 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W2997303449 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W3009191209 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W3020442746 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W3093214493 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W3108980237 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W3159829568 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W4206690630 @default.
- W4366606166 cites W4281484662 @default.
- W4366606166 doi "https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.1451-22.2023" @default.
- W4366606166 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37085319" @default.
- W4366606166 hasPublicationYear "2023" @default.
- W4366606166 type Work @default.
- W4366606166 citedByCount "3" @default.
- W4366606166 countsByYear W43666061662023 @default.
- W4366606166 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W4366606166 hasAuthorship W4366606166A5002694807 @default.
- W4366606166 hasAuthorship W4366606166A5008006939 @default.
- W4366606166 hasAuthorship W4366606166A5084214279 @default.
- W4366606166 hasBestOaLocation W43666061662 @default.
- W4366606166 hasConcept C129564537 @default.
- W4366606166 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W4366606166 hasConcept C163950791 @default.
- W4366606166 hasConcept C169760540 @default.
- W4366606166 hasConcept C169900460 @default.
- W4366606166 hasConcept C178253425 @default.
- W4366606166 hasConcept C180747234 @default.
- W4366606166 hasConcept C26760741 @default.
- W4366606166 hasConcept C2779918689 @default.
- W4366606166 hasConceptScore W4366606166C129564537 @default.
- W4366606166 hasConceptScore W4366606166C15744967 @default.
- W4366606166 hasConceptScore W4366606166C163950791 @default.
- W4366606166 hasConceptScore W4366606166C169760540 @default.
- W4366606166 hasConceptScore W4366606166C169900460 @default.
- W4366606166 hasConceptScore W4366606166C178253425 @default.
- W4366606166 hasConceptScore W4366606166C180747234 @default.
- W4366606166 hasConceptScore W4366606166C26760741 @default.
- W4366606166 hasConceptScore W4366606166C2779918689 @default.
- W4366606166 hasIssue "21" @default.
- W4366606166 hasLocation W43666061661 @default.
- W4366606166 hasLocation W43666061662 @default.
- W4366606166 hasLocation W43666061663 @default.
- W4366606166 hasLocation W43666061664 @default.
- W4366606166 hasLocation W43666061665 @default.
- W4366606166 hasOpenAccess W4366606166 @default.
- W4366606166 hasPrimaryLocation W43666061661 @default.
- W4366606166 hasRelatedWork W1978845746 @default.
- W4366606166 hasRelatedWork W2046659574 @default.
- W4366606166 hasRelatedWork W2058569227 @default.
- W4366606166 hasRelatedWork W2584260314 @default.
- W4366606166 hasRelatedWork W2889679890 @default.
- W4366606166 hasRelatedWork W2947945141 @default.
- W4366606166 hasRelatedWork W3026469451 @default.