4.2 Article

Individual differences in the tendency to see the expected

Journal

CONSCIOUSNESS AND COGNITION
Volume 85, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.concog.2020.102989

Keywords

Individual differences; Visual awareness; Attention; Expectation; Predictive processing; Binocular rivalry

Funding

  1. School of Psychology, University of Sussex
  2. Dr Mortimer and Theresa Sackler Foundation
  3. Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (Azrieli Programme in Mind, Brain and Consciousness)

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Prior knowledge has been shown to facilitate the incorporation of visual stimuli into awareness. We adopted an individual differences approach to explore whether a tendency to 'see the expected' is general or method-specific. We administered a binocular rivalry task and manipulated selective attention, as well as induced expectations via predictive context, self-generated imagery, expectancy cues, and perceptual priming. Most prior manipulations led to a facilitated awareness of the biased percept in binocular rivalry, whereas strong signal primes led to a suppressed awareness, i.e., adaptation. Correlations and factor analysis revealed that the facilitatory effect of priors on visual awareness is closely related to attentional control. We also investigated whether expectation-based biases predict perceptual abilities. Adaptation to strong primes predicted improved naturalistic change detection and the facilitatory effect of weak primes predicted the experience of perceptual anomalies. Taken together, our results indicate that the facilitatory effect of priors may be underpinned by an attentional mechanism but the tendency to 'see the expected' is method-specific.

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