Global motion aftereffect does not depend on awareness of the adapting motion direction

Document Type

Journal article

Source Publication

Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics

Publication Date

4-1-2014

Volume

76

Issue

3

First Page

766

Last Page

779

Publisher

Springer

Keywords

Adaptation, aftereffects, motion integration, visual awareness

Abstract

It has been shown that humans cannot perceive more than three directions from a multidirectional motion stimulus. However, it remains unknown whether adapting to such imperceptible motion directions could generate motion aftereffects (MAEs). A series of psychophysical experiments were conducted to address this issue. Using a display consisting of randomly oriented Gabors, we replicated previous findings that observers were unable to perceive the global directions embedded in a five-direction motion pattern. However, adapting to this multidirectional pattern induced both static and dynamic MAEs, despite the fact that observers were unaware of any global motion directions during adaptation. Furthermore, by comparing the strengths of the dynamic MAEs induced at different levels of motion processing, we found that spatial integration of local illusory signals per se was sufficient to produce a significant global MAE. These psychophysical results show that the generation of a directional global MAE does not require conscious perception of the global motion during adaptation.

DOI

10.​3758/​s13414-013-0609-8

Print ISSN

19433921

E-ISSN

1943393X

Publisher Statement

Copyright © 2014 Psychonomic Society, Inc.

Access to external full text or publisher's version may require subscription.

Full-text Version

Publisher’s Version

Language

English

Recommended Citation

Lee, A. L. F., & Lu, H. (2014). Global motion aftereffect does not depend on awareness of the adapting motion direction. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 76(3), 766-779. doi: 10.​3758/​s13414-013-0609-8

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