Attention is not always directed to events in the external environment. On occasion our thoughts wander to people and places distant from the here and now. Sometimes, this lack of external attention can compromise ongoing task performance. In the current study we set out to understand the extent to which states of internal and external attention can be determined using pupillometry as an index of ongoing cognition. In two experiments we found that periods of slow responding were associated with elevations in the baseline pupil signal over three and a half seconds prior to a behavioural response. In the second experiment we found that unlike behavioural lapses, states of off-task thought, particularly those associated with a focus on the past and with an intrusive quality, were associated with reductions in the size of the pupil over the same window prior to the probe. These data show that both states of large and small baseline pupil size are linked to states when attention is not effectively focused on the external environment, although these states have different qualities. More generally, these findings illustrate that subjective and objective markers of task performance may not be equivalent and underscore the importance of developing objective indicators that can allow these different states to be understood.
2 AbstractPurpose: The study investigated whether perceptual learning (PL) of a task consisting in detecting a low contrast Gabor patch flanked above and below by high contrast Gabor patches presented monocularly in the preferred retinal locus (PRL) of patients with macular degeneration (MD), improved their residual visual functions. Method:We measured contrast detection thresholds using both a Yes/No task (three MD patients and three controls) and a temporal two-alternative forced-choice task (2AFC; four MD patients and three controls).Results: Both tasks produced a significant improvement in contrast sensitivity for the trained target.However, only in the case of the temporal-2AFC this improvement depended on the target-toflankers distance. Furthermore, in both tasks PL improved visual acuity but with the temporal-2AFC task we found a higher degree of generalization of the training to untrained stimuli and tasks.In fact, we found a reduction of the crowding effect and an improvement of the contrast sensitivity for untrained spatial frequencies.Although PL is more effective with a temporal-2AFC task, it is also present with a Yes/No task, suggesting that PL reflects sensory enhancement, rather than improvement in decision mechanisms.Most importantly, follow-up tests on MD patients showed that PL effects were retained between four and eight months, suggesting PL induced long-term neural plasticity in the visual cortex. Conclusion:The results show for the first time that PL with a collinear configuration has strong, non-invasive and long lasting rehabilitative potential to improve vision in the PRL of patients with central vision loss.3
Perceptual learning has been shown to produce an improvement of visual acuity (VA) and contrast sensitivity (CS) both in subjects with amblyopia and refractive defects such as myopia or presbyopia. Transcranial random noise stimulation (tRNS) has proven to be efficacious in accelerating neural plasticity and boosting perceptual learning in healthy participants. In this study, we investigated whether a short behavioral training regime using a contrast detection task combined with online tRNS was as effective in improving visual functions in participants with mild myopia compared to a 2-month behavioral training regime without tRNS (Camilleri et al., 2014). After 2 weeks of perceptual training in combination with tRNS, participants showed an improvement of 0.15 LogMAR in uncorrected VA (UCVA) that was comparable with that obtained after 8 weeks of training with no tRNS, and an improvement in uncorrected CS (UCCS) at various spatial frequencies (whereas no UCCS improvement was seen after 8 weeks of training with no tRNS). On the other hand, a control group that trained for 2 weeks without stimulation did not show any significant UCVA or UCCS improvement. These results suggest that the combination of behavioral and neuromodulatory techniques can be fast and efficacious in improving sight in individuals with mild myopia.
The brain can retain speed information in early visual short-term memory in an astonishingly precise manner. We investigated whether this (early) visual memory system is active during the extrapolation of occluded motion and whether it reflects speed misperception due to contrast and size. Experiments 1A and 2A showed that reducing target contrast or increasing its size led to an illusory speed underestimation. Experiments 1B, 2B, and 3 showed that this illusory phenomenon is reflected in the memory of speed during occluded motion, independent of the range of visible speeds, of the length of the visible trajectory or the invisible trajectory, and of the type of task. These results suggest that illusory speed is retained in memory during invisible motion.
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