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Independent sources of anisotropy in visual orientation representation: a visual and a cognitive oblique effect

Authors :
Nikolaos Smyrnis
Asimakis Mantas
Konstantinos Moutoussis
P. Gourtzelidis
Ioannis Evdokimidis
Panagiota Balikou
Source :
Experimental Brain Research. 233:3097-3108
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2015.

Abstract

The representation of visual orientation is more accurate for cardinal orientations compared to oblique, and this anisotropy has been hypothesized to reflect a low-level visual process (visual, "class 1" oblique effect). The reproduction of directional and orientation information also leads to a mean error away from cardinal orientations or directions. This anisotropy has been hypothesized to reflect a high-level cognitive process of space categorization (cognitive, "class 2," oblique effect). This space categorization process would be more prominent when the visual representation of orientation degrades such as in the case of working memory with increasing cognitive load, leading to increasing magnitude of the "class 2" oblique effect, while the "class 1" oblique effect would remain unchanged. Two experiments were performed in which an array of orientation stimuli (1-4 items) was presented and then subjects had to realign a probe stimulus within the previously presented array. In the first experiment, the delay between stimulus presentation and probe varied, while in the second experiment, the stimulus presentation time varied. The variable error was larger for oblique compared to cardinal orientations in both experiments reproducing the visual "class 1" oblique effect. The mean error also reproduced the tendency away from cardinal and toward the oblique orientations in both experiments (cognitive "class 2" oblique effect). The accuracy or the reproduced orientation degraded (increasing variable error) and the cognitive "class 2" oblique effect increased with increasing memory load (number of items) in both experiments and presentation time in the second experiment. In contrast, the visual "class 1" oblique effect was not significantly modulated by any one of these experimental factors. These results confirmed the theoretical predictions for the two anisotropies in visual orientation reproduction and provided support for models proposing the categorization of orientation in visual working memory.

Details

ISSN :
14321106 and 00144819
Volume :
233
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Experimental Brain Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....18a5815f5a3b5faf55ba269ddbe09116