Author:
Sano Hironobu,Ueno Natsuki,Maruyama Hironori,Motoyoshi Isamu
Abstract
AbstractIn many situations, humans serially sample information from many locations in an image to make an appropriate decision about a visual target. Spatial attention plays a crucial role in this serial vision process. To investigate the effect of spatial attention in such dynamic decision making, we applied a classification image (CI) analysis locked to the observer’s reaction time (RT). We asked human observers to detect as rapidly as possible a target whose contrast gradually increased on the left or right side of dynamic noise, with the presentation of a spatial cue. The analysis revealed a spatiotemporally biphasic profile of the CI which peaked at ∼350 ms before the observer’s response. We found that a valid cue presented at the target location shortened the RT and increased the overall amplitude of the CI, especially when the cue appeared 500-1250 ms before the observer’s response. The results were quantitatively accounted for by a simple perceptual decision mechanism that accumulates the outputs of the spatiotemporal contrast detector, whose gain is increased by sustained attention to the cued location.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory