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Dr.
RIKEN Center for Brain Science
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Schedule
Tuesday, December 14, 2021
9:00 AM Australia/Melbourne
Recording provided by the organiser.
Domain
Original Event
View sourceHost
Asia Pacific Consciousness Network
Duration
90 minutes
Visual perceptual learning (VPL) is defined as improved performance on a visual task due to visual experience. It was once argued that attention to a visual feature is necessary for VPL of the feature to occur. Contrary to this view, a phenomenon called task-irrelevant VPL demonstrated that VPL can occur due to exposure to a feature which is sub-threshold and task-irrelevant, and therefore, unattended. A series of findings based on task-irrelevant VPL has indicated the following two mechanisms. First, attention to a feature facilitates VPL of the feature while inhibiting VPL of unattended and supra-threshold features. Second, reward paired with a feature enables VPL of the feature irrespective of whether the feature is attended or not. However, we recently found an additional twist; VPL of a task-irrelevant and supra-threshold feature embedded in a natural scene is not subject to the inhibition of attention. This new finding suggests a need to revise the current view or add a new mechanism as to how VPL occurs.
Kazuhisa Shibata
Dr.
RIKEN Center for Brain Science
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