2016
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2016.0263
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Do perceptual biases emerge early or late in visual processing? Decision-biases in motion perception

Abstract: Visual perception is strongly influenced by contextual information. A good example is reference repulsion, where subjective reports about the direction of motion of a stimulus are significantly biased by the presence of an explicit reference. These perceptual biases could arise early, during sensory encoding, or alternatively, they may reflect decision-related processes occurring relatively late in the task sequence. To separate these two competing possibilities, we asked (human) subjects to perform a fine mot… Show more

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Cited by 36 publications
(94 citation statements)
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“…Figure 2b shows the resulting distributions for both strategies given the specific parameter settings of our generative model. Note that the estimate distributions fundamentally differ; the conditioned inference strategy exhibits a characteristic bimodal distribution for θ values close to the category boundary, which matches a range of experimental results (Jazayeri and Movshon, 2007; Zamboni et al, 2016; Luu and Stocker, 2018).…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 74%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…Figure 2b shows the resulting distributions for both strategies given the specific parameter settings of our generative model. Note that the estimate distributions fundamentally differ; the conditioned inference strategy exhibits a characteristic bimodal distribution for θ values close to the category boundary, which matches a range of experimental results (Jazayeri and Movshon, 2007; Zamboni et al, 2016; Luu and Stocker, 2018).…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 74%
“…3e). This corresponds to many of the estimation tasks reported in previous studies (Jazayeri and Movshon, 2007; Zamboni et al, 2016; Luu and Stocker, 2018). Local relative accuracy shows very similar curves (Fig.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 55%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Recently developed task protocols provide new tools for assessing the impact of choices on the accumulation of subsequent decision evidence. These tasks prompt two successive judgments within the same trial: commonly a binary choice followed up by a continuous estimation [33][34][35][36][37][38] or a confidence [39,40] judgment. Specifically, some tasks prompt binary choice and estimation judgments sequentially, separated by a second evidence stream presented in between [35,39,40,38].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%