Abstract

We investigated how various grouping factors altered subjective disappearances of the individual targets in the motion-induced blindness display. The latter relies on a moving mask to render highly salient static targets temporarily subjectively invisible. Specifically, we employed two extrinsic grouping factors, the connectedness and the common region, and examined whether their presence would make targets more resilient against the suppression. In addition, we investigated whether the presence of an illusory Kanizsa triangle would affect the suppression of the inducing Pac-Man elements. We quantified the perceptual dynamics using the proportion of the disappearance time (this indicates whether targets became more resilient against the suppression), and the proportion of simultaneous disappearance and reappearance events (characterizes the tendency for the targets to disappear or reappear as a group). We report that a single mask that encompassed all targets (a common region grouping) significantly increased the proportion of simultaneous disappearance and reappearance events, but had no effect on the proportion of the disappearance time. In contrast, a line that connected two targets significantly decreased the total invisibility time, but had no impact on the simultaneity of the disappearance and reappearance events. We found no statistically significant effect of the presence of the illusory Kanizsa triangle on either measure. Finally, we found no interaction either between the common region and the connectedness or between the common region and the presence of the illusory Kanizsa triangle. Our results indicate that extrinsic grouping factors might influence the perception differently than the intrinsic ones and highlight the importance of using several measures to characterize the perceptual dynamics, as various grouping factors might affect it differentially.

Highlights

  • We experience the world as being composed of objects, object parts, textures, etc., without noticing the clutter and ambiguity of retinal inputs

  • We investigated how the Extrinsic grouping factors in motion-induced blindness presence of the individual grouping factors or of their combination alters the dynamics of perceptual disappearances using the MIB paradigm

  • We investigated a combination of two grouping factors—the connectedness and the common region–on the perception of the targets in MIB (Fig 1A and 1B)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

We experience the world as being composed of objects, object parts, textures, etc., without noticing the clutter and ambiguity of retinal inputs. The visual system constructs the representation by structuring the visual scene into individual objects This process of grouping is critical to the emergence of the object perception and it relies on various heuristics. A prime example is an animal or man-made camouflage that makes an animal blend into the environment (think polar bears in snow) or breaks up the silhouette (think zebras) [1,2]. This intrinsic complexity of a typical real-world scene prompted multiple studies that explored perceptual effects of grouping by multiple factors [8,9,10,11,12,13,14]. Other studies showed an interaction between the common region [16], on the one hand, and proximity and similarity [14], on the other

Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call