Abstract

The perception of a visual event (e.g., a flock of birds) at the present moment can be biased by a previous perceptual experience (e.g., the perception of an earlier flock). Serial dependence is a perceptual bias whereby a current stimulus appears more similar to a previous one than it actually is. Whereas serial dependence emerges within several visual stimulus dimensions, whether it could simultaneously operate across different dimensions of the same stimulus (e.g., the numerosity and the duration of a visual pattern) remains unclear. Here we address this question by assessing the presence of serial dependence across duration and numerosity, two stimulus dimensions that are often associated and can bias each other. Participants performed either a duration or a numerosity discrimination task, in which they compared a constant reference with a variable test stimulus, varying along the task-relevant dimension (either duration or numerosity). Serial dependence was induced by a task-irrelevant inducer, that is, a stimulus presented before the reference and always varying in both duration and numerosity. The results show systematic serial dependencies only within the task-relevant stimulus dimension, that is, stimulus numerosity affects numerosity perception only, and duration affects duration perception only. Additionally, at least in the numerosity condition, the task-irrelevant dimension of the inducer (duration) had an opposite, repulsive effect. These findings thus show that attractive serial dependence operates in a highly specific fashion and does not transfer across different stimulus dimensions. Instead, the repulsive influence, possibly reflecting perceptual adaptation, can transfer from one dimension to another.

Highlights

  • The stimuli we perceive are rarely isolated, but more often they are spatially surrounded and temporally preceded by others

  • To address whether serial dependence generalizes across different magnitude dimensions, we used a numerosity and a duration discrimination task of stimuli varying in both numerosity and duration

  • The effect of serial dependence was measured as the influence of the “inducer” on the perception of the subsequent reference stimulus, which was presented in the same spatial position

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Summary

Introduction

The stimuli we perceive are rarely isolated, but more often they are spatially surrounded and temporally preceded by others. Serial dependence has been shown to be pervasive in vision, emerging in several visual domains spanning from relatively simple visual attributes such as orientation (Fischer & Whitney, 2014; Fritsche, Mostert, & de Lange, 2017; Pascucci, Mancuso, Santandrea, Della Libera, Plomp, & Chelazzi„ 2019), position (Manassi, Liberman, Kosovicheva, Zhang, & Whitney, 2018), numerosity (Corbett, Fischer, & Whitney, 2011; Fornaciai & Park, 2018a; Fornaciai & Park, 2018b) and motion (Alais, Leung, & Van der Burg, 2017) to more complex features such as face identity (Liberman, Fischer, & Whitney, 2014), attractiveness (Xia, Leib, & Whitney, 2016), and visual variance (Suárez-Pinilla, Seth, & Roseboom, 2018).

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