对人脸的视觉适应动力学。

D. Leopold, G. Rhodes, Kai-Markus Müller, L. Jeffery
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引用次数: 172

摘要

最近几次使用视觉适应的演示揭示了对包括人脸在内的复杂模式的高水平后遗症。传统的后遗症包括在视觉皮层层次的早期处理的简单属性的感知扭曲,如方向或颜色,而面部适应影响感知的身份和表情,这被认为是高阶处理的产物。而且,与大多数简单的后效不同,那些涉及面部的后效对适应刺激和测试刺激之间的尺度、位置和方向的变化是稳健的。这些差异提出了一个问题,即面部后遗症与传统后遗症的关系有多密切。人们对面部后遗症的积累和衰减知之甚少,而这些动态过程与传统后遗症的相似性可能会为这种关系提供洞见。我们研究了改变适应刺激和测试刺激的持续时间对面孔身份感知扭曲程度的影响。我们发现,与传统后效一样,同一性后效随适应时间呈对数增强,随测试时间呈指数减弱。即使是这些动态的微妙方面,例如适应和测试持续时间之间的幂律关系,也与其他后效非常相似。这些结果是在两组不同的面部刺激下获得的,这两组刺激在低水平属性上有很大的不同。我们假设控制这些共享动态的机制可能与早期视觉皮层中特征选择神经元的反应分离。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The dynamics of visual adaptation to faces.
Several recent demonstrations using visual adaptation have revealed high-level aftereffects for complex patterns including faces. While traditional aftereffects involve perceptual distortion of simple attributes such as orientation or colour that are processed early in the visual cortical hierarchy, face adaptation affects perceived identity and expression, which are thought to be products of higher-order processing. And, unlike most simple aftereffects, those involving faces are robust to changes in scale, position and orientation between the adapting and test stimuli. These differences raise the question of how closely related face aftereffects are to traditional ones. Little is known about the build-up and decay of the face aftereffect, and the similarity of these dynamic processes to traditional aftereffects might provide insight into this relationship. We examined the effect of varying the duration of both the adapting and test stimuli on the magnitude of perceived distortions in face identity. We found that, just as with traditional aftereffects, the identity aftereffect grew logarithmically stronger as a function of adaptation time and exponentially weaker as a function of test duration. Even the subtle aspects of these dynamics, such as the power-law relationship between the adapting and test durations, closely resembled that of other aftereffects. These results were obtained with two different sets of face stimuli that differed greatly in their low-level properties. We postulate that the mechanisms governing these shared dynamics may be dissociable from the responses of feature-selective neurons in the early visual cortex.
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