4.7 Article

Tuning perception and decisions to temporal context

Journal

ISCIENCE
Volume 26, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2023.108008

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Recent work suggests that serial dependence arises from the prior that sensory input is temporally correlated. By manipulating the temporal statistics of visual stimuli, researchers found that temporal correlation in the stimulus history leads to repulsive biases, while temporal correlation in the decision history reduces attractive biases.
Recent work suggests that serial dependence, where perceptual decisions are biased toward previous stimuli, arises from the prior that sensory input is temporally correlated. However, existing studies have mostly used random stimulus sequences that do not involve such temporal consistencies. Here, we manipulated the temporal statistics of visual stimuli to examine the role of true temporal correlations in serial dependence. In two experiments, observers reproduced the orientation of the last stimulus in a sequence, while we varied temporal correlations in the stimulus features at two timescales: stimulus history within the trial and decision history across trials. We found a clear dissociation: increasing temporal correlation in the stimulus history led to adaptation-like repulsive biases, whereas increasing temporal correlation in the decision history reduced attractive biases. Thus, we suggest that temporal correlation enhances the discriminative ability of the visual system, revealing the fundamental role of the broader temporal context.

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