Abstract

Perceptual accuracy is known to be influenced by stimuli location within the visual field. In particular, it seems to be enhanced in the lower visual hemifield (VH) for motion and space processing, and in the upper VH for object and face processing. The origins of such asymmetries are attributed to attentional biases across the visual field, and in the functional organization of the visual system. In this article, we tested content-dependent perceptual asymmetries in different regions of the visual field. Twenty-five healthy volunteers participated in this study. They performed three visual tests involving perception of shapes, orientation and motion, in the four quadrants of the visual field. The results of the visual tests showed that perceptual accuracy was better in the lower than in the upper visual field for motion perception, and better in the upper than in the lower visual field for shape perception. Orientation perception did not show any vertical bias. No difference was found when comparing right and left VHs. The functional organization of the visual system seems to indicate that the dorsal and the ventral visual streams, responsible for motion and shape perception, respectively, show a bias for the lower and upper VHs, respectively. Such a bias depends on the content of the visual information.

Highlights

  • Human visual perception is not uniform in different regions of the visual field (Levine and McAnany, 2005). van Doorn et al (1972) were among the first ones to study this topic in 1972

  • analysis of variance (ANOVA) on the performance in the upper and lower visual hemifield (VH) showed a main effect of factor SUBTASK [F(2,23) = 103.92, p < 0.01]

  • ANOVA on the response latencies in the upper and lower VHs showed a main effect of factor SUBTASK [F(2,23) = 44.72, p < 0.01]

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Summary

Introduction

Human visual perception is not uniform in different regions of the visual field (Levine and McAnany, 2005). van Doorn et al (1972) were among the first ones to study this topic in 1972. van Doorn et al (1972) were among the first ones to study this topic in 1972. Human visual perception is not uniform in different regions of the visual field (Levine and McAnany, 2005). They found that the constitution of the receptor population in the retina strongly depends on the eccentricity, with higher density of photoreceptors in the center, and lower in the periphery. Talgar and Carrasco (2002) found, for example, higher perceptual accuracy when a behavioral task involving spatial resolution was performed in the lower VH.

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