Testing the generality of the zoom-lens model: Evidence for visual-pathway specific effects of attended-region size on perception
Date
Authors
Goodhew, Stephanie Catherine
Lawrence, Rebecca
Edwards, Mark
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer Verlag
Abstract
There are volumes of information available to process in visual scenes. Visual spatial attention is a critically important selection mechanism that prevents these volumes from overwhelming our visual system's limited-capacity processing resources. We were interested in understanding the effect of the size of the attended area on visual perception. The prevailing model of attended-region size across cognition, perception, and neuroscience is the zoom-lens model. This model stipulates that the magnitude of perceptual processing enhancement is inversely related to the size of the attended region, such that a narrow attended-region facilitates greater perceptual enhancement than a wider region. Yet visual processing is subserved by two major visual pathways (magnocellular and parvocellular) that operate with a degree of independence in early visual processing and encode contrasting visual information. Historically, testing of the zoom-lens has used measures of spatial acuity ideally suited to parvocellular processing. This, therefore, raises questions about the generality of the zoom-lens model to different aspects of visual perception. We found that while a narrow attended-region facilitated spatial acuity and the perception of high spatial frequency targets, it had no impact on either temporal acuity or the perception of low spatial frequency targets. This pattern also held up when targets were not presented centrally. This supports the notion that visual attended-region size has dissociable effects on magnocellular versus parvocellular mediated visual processing.
Description
Keywords
attention, magnocellular, parvocellular, spatial acuity, spatial frequency, temporal acuity, visual attention, visual perception, visual span, zoom-lens, adolescent, adult, attention, female, humans, photic stimulation, space perception, vision, ocular, visual pathways, visual perception, young adult
Citation
Collections
Source
Attention, perception & psychophysics
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
Open Access
License Rights
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description