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Serial Dependence

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serial dependence

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with serial dependence across World Wide.
6 curated items4 Seminars2 ePosters
Updated over 3 years ago
6 items · serial dependence
6 results
SeminarPsychology

Distributed and stable memory representations may lead to serial dependence

Raymundo Neto
Hospital Albert Einstein (Brazil)
Apr 12, 2022

Perception and action are biased by our recent experiences. Even when a sequence of stimuli are randomly presented, responses are sometimes attracted toward the past. The mechanism of such bias, recently termed serial dependence, is still under investigation. Currently, there is mixed evidence indicating that such bias could be either from a sensory and perceptual origin or occurring only at decisional stages. In this talk, I will present recent findings from our group showing that biases are decreased when disrupting the memory trace in a premotor region in a simple visuomotor task. In addition, we have shown that this bias is stable over periods of up to 8 s. At the end, I will show ongoing analysis of a recent experiment and argue that serial dependence may rely on distributed memory representations of stimuli and task relevant features.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Rhythms in perception: action planning and behavioral oscillations

Maria Concetta Morrone
University of Pisa - Italy
Feb 16, 2022
SeminarNeuroscience

What is serially-dependent perception good for?

Mauro Manassi
University of Aberdeen, UK
Jan 13, 2021

Perception can be strongly serially-dependent (i.e. biased toward previously seen stimuli). Recently, serial dependencies in perception were proposed as a mechanism for perceptual stability, increasing the apparent continuity of the complex environments we experience in everyday life. For example, stable scene perception can be actively achieved by the visual system through global serial dependencies, a special kind of serial dependence between summary statistical representations. Serial dependence occurs also between emotional expressions, but it is highly selective for the same identity. Overall, these results further support the notion of serial dependence as a global, highly specialized, and purposeful mechanism. However, serial dependence could also be a deleterious phenomenon in unnatural or unpredictable situations, such as visual search in radiological scans, biasing current judgments toward previous ones even when accurate and unbiased perception is needed. For example, observers make consistent perceptual errors when classifying a tumor- like shape on the current trial, seeing it as more similar to the shape presented on the previous trial. In a separate localization test, observers make consistent errors when reporting the perceived position of an objects on the current trial, mislocalizing it toward the position in the preceding trial. Taken together, these results show two opposite sides of serial dependence; it can be a beneficial mechanism which promotes perceptual stability, but at the same time a deleterious mechanism which impairs our percept when fine recognition is needed.

ePoster

Dynamics of interhemispheric prefrontal coordination underlying serial dependence in working memory

COSYNE 2022

ePoster

The posterior parietal cortex mediates serial dependence during visuospatial attention

Raj V Jain, Sridharan Devarajan

COSYNE 2025