Abstract

Natural image statistics exhibit temporal regularities of slow changes and short-term correlations and visual perception, too, is biased toward recently seen stimuli, i.e., a positive serial dependence. Some studies report strong individual differences in serial dependence in perceptual decision-making: some observers show positive serial effects, others repulsive effects, and some show no bias. To understand these contrasting results, this study separates the influences of physical stimuli per se, perceptual choices, and motor responses on serial dependence in perceptual decision making. In two experiments, human observers reported which orientation (45° or −45°, at threshold contrast) they perceived. Experiment 1, used a consistent mapping between stimulus and response buttons whereas in Experiment 2, observers did two tasks: one with a consistent stimulus-response mapping, the other with a random stimulus-response mapping (perceptual choice and motor response unrelated). Results show that the stimulus percept (not the physical stimulus per se) affected subsequent perceptual choices in an attractive way and that motor responses produced a repulsive serial effect. When the choice-response mapping was consistent (inseparable choice and response, typical of most experiments), individual differences in the overall serial effect was observed: some were positive, some repulsive, and some were bias-free. The multiple regression analysis revealed that observers’ overall serial effects in the consistent choice-response mapping task could be predicted by their serial effects for choices and motor responses in the random mapping task. These individual differences likely reflect relative weightings of a positive choice bias and a repulsive motor bias.

Highlights

  • Introduction historyUsing continuous measures of perception, it has been shown that visual perception at a given moment is biased towards the recently seen stimuli

  • The current study examined serial dependence in orientation discrimination under conditions of stimulus uncertainty

  • By wellcontrolled data analysis and manipulation of stimulus-response mapping, we clarified the roles of stimulus, perceptual choice, and motor response in serial effects

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Summary

Introduction

Introduction historyUsing continuous measures of perception (reproducing the presented stimuli or rating on a scale), it has been shown that visual perception at a given moment is biased towards the recently seen stimuli (i.e., a positive serial dependence). There were individual differences in the sign of the serial effect (positive or repulsive bias) when using the consistent stimulus-response mapping. The analysis of dependence on the previous stimulus 1-5 trials back revealed no significant influence on current perceptual choices (t(28) = -0.27, 0.56, 0.75, -0.28 and 0.79, ps = 0.78, 0.58, 0.46, 0.78 and 0.44, respectively.

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