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- Title
How do (perceptual) distracters distract?
- Authors
Dumbalska, Tsvetomira; Rudzka, Katarzyna; Smithson, Hannah E.; Summerfield, Christopher
- Abstract
When a target stimulus occurs in the presence of distracters, decisions are less accurate. But how exactly do distracters affect choices? Here, we explored this question using measurement of human behaviour, psychophysical reverse correlation and computational modelling. We contrasted two models: one in which targets and distracters had independent influence on choices (independent model) and one in which distracters modulated choices in a way that depended on their similarity to the target (interaction model). Across three experiments, participants were asked to make fine orientation judgments about the tilt of a target grating presented adjacent to an irrelevant distracter. We found strong evidence for the interaction model, in that decisions were more sensitive when target and distracter were consistent relative to when they were inconsistent. This consistency bias occurred in the frame of reference of the decision, that is, it operated on decision values rather than on sensory signals, and surprisingly, it was independent of spatial attention. A normalization framework, where target features are normalized by the expectation and variability of the local context, successfully captures the observed pattern of results. Author summary: In the real world, visual scenes usually contain many objects. As a consequence, we often have to make perceptual judgments about a specific 'target' stimulus in the presence of irrelevant 'distracter' stimuli. For instance, when hanging a picture frame, we want to discern whether it is hanging straight, ignoring the surrounding, potentially tilted frames. Laboratory experiments have shown that the presence of distracter stimuli (i.e. other picture frames) makes this type of perceptual judgment less accurate. However, the specific effect distracters have on judgments is controversial. Here, we conducted a series of experiments to compare two alternative theories of distracter influence: one in which distracters compete with targets to determine choices (independent model) and one in which distracters wield a more indirect influence on choices (interaction model). We found evidence for the latter account. Our results suggest distracters affect perceptual decisions by adjusting how sensitive decisions are to the target stimulus.
- Subjects
BEHAVIORAL assessment; JUDGMENT (Psychology); PICTURE frames &; framing; STIMULUS &; response (Psychology)
- Publication
PLoS Computational Biology, 2022, Vol 18, Issue 10, p1
- ISSN
1553-734X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1371/journal.pcbi.1010609