The continuous Wagon Wheel Illusion depends on, but is not identical to neuronal adaptation. - Université Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier - Toulouse INP Accéder directement au contenu
Article Dans Une Revue Vision Research Année : 2007

The continuous Wagon Wheel Illusion depends on, but is not identical to neuronal adaptation.

Rufin Vanrullen

Résumé

The occurrence of perceived reversed motion while observers view a continuous, periodically moving stimulus (a bistable phenomenon coined the "continuous Wagon Wheel Illusion" or "c-WWI") has been taken as evidence that some aspects of motion perception rely on discrete sampling of visual information. Alternative accounts rely on the possibility of a motion aftereffect that may become visible even while the adapting stimulus is present. Here I show that motion adaptation might be necessary, but is not sufficient to explain the illusion. When local adaptation is prevented by slowly drifting the moving wheel across the retina, the c-WWI illusion tends to decrease, as do other bistable percepts (e.g. binocular rivalry). However, the strength of the c-WWI and that of adaptation (as measured by either the static or flicker motion aftereffects) are not directly related: although the c-WWI decreases with increasing eccentricity, the aftereffects actually intensify concurrently. A similar dissociation can be induced by manipulating stimulus contrast. This indicates that the c-WWI may be enabled by, but is not equivalent to, local motion adaptation - and that other factors such as discrete sampling may be involved in its generation.

Dates et versions

hal-00170575 , version 1 (10-09-2007)

Identifiants

Citer

Rufin Vanrullen. The continuous Wagon Wheel Illusion depends on, but is not identical to neuronal adaptation.. Vision Research, 2007, 47 (16), pp.2143-9. ⟨10.1016/j.visres.2007.03.019⟩. ⟨hal-00170575⟩
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