Abstract

Peripheral vision has different functional priorities for mammals than foveal vision. One of its roles is to monitor the environment while central vision is focused on the current task. Becoming distracted too easily would be counterproductive in this perspective, so the brain should react to behaviourally relevant changes. Gist processing is good for this purpose, and it is therefore not surprising that evidence from both functional brain imaging and behavioural research suggests a tendency to generalize and blend information in the periphery. This may be caused by the balance of perceptual influence in the periphery between bottom-up (i.e., sensory information) and top-down (i.e., prior or contextual information) processing channels. Here, we investigated this interaction behaviourally using a peripheral numerosity discrimination task with top-down and bottom-up manipulations. Participants compared numerosity between the left and right peripheries of a screen. Each periphery was divided into a centre and a surrounding area, only one of which was a task relevant target region. Our top-down task modulation was the instruction which area to attend – centre or surround. We varied the signal strength by altering the stimuli durations i.e., the amount of information presented/processed (as a combined bottom-up and recurrent top-down feedback factor). We found that numerosity perceived in target regions was affected by contextual information in neighbouring (but irrelevant) areas. This effect appeared as soon as stimulus duration allowed the task to be reliably performed and persisted even at the longest duration (1 s). We compared the pattern of results with an ideal-observer model and found a qualitative difference in the way centre and surround areas interacted perceptually in the periphery. When participants reported on the central area, the irrelevant surround would affect the response as a weighted combination – consistent with the idea of a receptive field focused in the target area to which irrelevant surround stimulation leaks in. When participants report on surround, we can best describe the response with a model in which occasionally the attention switches from task relevant surround to task irrelevant centre – consistent with a selection model of two competing streams of information. Overall our results show that the influence of spatial context in the periphery is mandatory but task dependent.

Highlights

  • Visual resolution decreases toward the periphery of the visual field, compared to foveal vision

  • We investigated the processing of numerical magnitude in peripheral visual displays, in which we found that the perceived numerosity of the target area is biased toward the number of dots presented in irrelevant neighbouring areas

  • We argue that top-down factors, such as directing attention toward different areas in the peripheral visual field, have an impact on how predictions are incorporated into perceptual decisions about numerosity in peripheral vision

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Summary

Introduction

Visual resolution decreases toward the periphery of the visual field, compared to foveal vision. While functional brain imaging research using a visual occlusion paradigm shows that the content of a visual scene can be decoded from brain activity patterns in a non-stimulated, peripheral part of the retinotopic visual cortex (Smith and Muckli, 2010; Muckli et al, 2015; Revina et al, 2018; Morgan et al, 2019), human peripheral vision tends to generalise scene information, as evidenced by behavioural phenomena such as crowding (e.g., Balas et al, 2009), the uniformity illusion (Otten et al, 2017), and a higher prominence of gist processing (Larson and Loschky, 2009) This tendency to generalize and blend information is ecologically relevant, if we consider that one of the roles of peripheral vision is to monitor the environment for relevant changes while we use foveal vision to focus on the current task. We need to be made aware of those changes in the environment that are sufficiently salient or unpredictable to be worth further consideration

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