Attentional control of early perceptual learning.
- 15 June 1993
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 90 (12) , 5718-5722
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.90.12.5718
Abstract
The performance of adult humans in simple visual tasks improves dramatically with practice. This improvement is highly specific to basic attributes of the trained stimulus, suggesting that the underlying changes occur at low-level processing stages in the brain, where different orientations and spatial frequencies are handled by separate channels. We asked whether these practice effects are determined solely by activity in stimulus-driven mechanisms or whether high-level attentional mechanisms, which are linked to the perceptual task, might control the learning process. We found that practicing one task did not improve performance in an alternative task, even though both tasks used exactly the same visual stimuli but depended on different stimulus attributes (either orientation of local elements or global shape). Moreover, even when the experiment was designed so that the same responses were associated with the same stimuli (although subjects were instructed to attend to the attribute underlying one task), learning did not transfer from one task to the other. These results suggest that specific high-level attentional mechanisms, controlling changes at early visual processing levels, are essential in perceptual learning.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dependence of Cortical Plasticity on Correlated Activity of Single Neurons and on Behavioral ContextScience, 1992
- Improvement in line orientation discrimination is retinally local but dependent on cognitive setPerception & Psychophysics, 1992
- Fast Perceptual Learning in Visual HyperacuityScience, 1992
- Changes in the distributed temporal response properties of SI cortical neurons reflect improvements in performance on a temporally based tactile discrimination taskJournal of Neurophysiology, 1992
- Distributed Hierarchical Processing in the Primate Cerebral CortexCerebral Cortex, 1991
- Vision outside the focus of attentionPerception & Psychophysics, 1989
- Visual Processing in Monkey Extrastriate CortexAnnual Review of Neuroscience, 1987
- Direction-specific improvement in motion discriminationVision Research, 1987
- Visual routinesCognition, 1984
- A Specific and Enduring Improvement in Visual Motion DiscriminationScience, 1982