Interactions between concentric form-from-structure and face perception revealed by visual masking but not adaptation

Eric Feczko, Gordon L. Shulman, Steven E. Petersen, John R. Pruett

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Findings from diverse subfields of vision research suggest a potential link between high-level aspects of face perception and concentric form-from-structure perception. To explore this relationship, typical adults performed two adaptation experiments and two masking experiments to test whether concentric, but not nonconcentric, Glass patterns (a type of form-fromstructure stimulus) utilize a processing mechanism shared by face perception. For the adaptation experiments, subjects were presented with an adaptor for 5 or 20 s, prior to discriminating a target. In the masking experiments, subjects saw a mask, then a target, and then a second mask. Measures of discriminability and bias were derived and repeated measures analysis of variance tested for pattern-specific masking and adaptation effects. Results from Experiment 1 show no Glass pattern-specific effect of adaptation to faces; results from Experiment 2 show concentric Glass pattern masking, but not adaptation, may impair upright/inverted face discrimination; results from Experiment 3 show concentric and radial Glass pattern masking impaired subsequent upright/inverted face discrimination more than translational Glass pattern masking; and results from Experiment 4 show concentric and radial Glass pattern masking impaired subsequent face gender discrimination more than translational Glass pattern masking. Taken together, these findings demonstrate interactions between concentric formfrom- structure and face processing, suggesting a possible common processing pathway.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1-21
Number of pages21
JournalJournal of vision
Volume14
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 2014
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Face perception
  • Glass patterns
  • Holistic processing
  • Moire perception
  • Visual adaptation
  • Visual masking

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