What You Think Is What You See

Summary: Perception and working memory are more deeply entangled than previously believed.

Source: George Washington University

Many people have an intuitive, though incorrect, understanding of how the brain works: Our senses perceive objectively factual data, and our higher-level thought processes interpret that data, pull some levers and shape our conclusions and behavior accordingly.

But perception and thought are fundamentally linked, according to research published in Nature Human Behavior last week by Dwight Kravitz, an assistant professor of cognitive neuroscience at the George Washington University.

“We create a false separation between our perception of the world and the way that we’re thinking about it,” Dr. Kravitz said. “But actually these two things occur at the same time, in the same place, and as a result, they interfere with each other. What you’re holding in mind changes what you see, and what you see changes what you’re holding in mind.”

Existing literature has established that perception and visual working memory (VWM), the ability to temporarily maintain and manipulate information, take place in the same parts of the brain. But “Visual Working Memory Directly Alters Perception,” written with postdoctoral student Chunyue Teng in the Columbian College of Arts and Sciences Department of Psychology, demonstrates the behavioral consequences of that proximity.

The study’s three experiments involved holding a visual stimulus in mind—either a color or a line tilted to a specific orientation—and then introducing a new color or orientation as a distractor during a distinct task. When the distractor was similar to the maintained content, it biased visual reports toward itself.

In the third experiment, which Dr. Kravitz called “the least purely academic,” subjects were asked to distinguish between two colors or orientations while holding in mind a third. When the maintained information fell between the two stimuli, subjects rated them as more similar; when it fell outside, subjects were more likely to differentiate them.

This shows a train in different colors

Holding a color in mind affects the perceived color of an image. Image is credited to Dwight Kravitz.

A subject might be asked to hold a shade of rose pink in their mind, for instance, and then be shown two more shades—one greener than the maintained shade, the other pinker. The subjects were likely to be able to differentiate between the new colors. If both introduced shades were greener (or pinker) than the rose-pink the subject was thinking about, however, the subject was less able to tell them apart.

“The human system is nothing like a camera,” Dr. Kravitz said. “The way you’re thinking about the world changes not just the way things are emphasized, but also your baseline perceptions. The actual content of the world shifts slightly in reference to the things you’re holding in mind.”

Dr. Kravitz said further research could have major implications about the way the stereotypes we hold in mind affect our perception.

“To find effects here, on this really basic level of visual perception, means that if you move up to more complicated judgments—trustworthiness of faces, the likelihood of particular things happening—they’re likely going to show similar, if not larger, effects,” Dr. Kravitz said. “The things that you’re holding in mind and the biases that you bring are going to change what you see and how you act.”

Source:
George Washington University
Media Contacts: 
Ruth Steinhardt – George Washington University
Image Source:
The image is credited to Dwight Kravitz.

Original Research: Closed access
“Visual working memory directly alters perception”. Chunyue Teng & Dwight J. Kravitz.
Nature Human Behavior. doi:10.1038/s41562-019-0640-4

Abstract

Visual working memory directly alters perception

Visual working memory (VWM), the ability to temporarily maintain and manipulate information, underlies a variety of critical high-level behaviours from directing attention to making complex decisions5. Here we show that its impact extends to even the most basic levels of perceptual processing, directly interacting with and even distorting the physical appearance of visual features. This interference results from and can be predicted by the recruitment of posterior perceptual cortices to maintain information in VWM, which causes an overlap with the neuronal populations supporting perceptual processing. Across three sets of experiments, we demonstrated bidirectional interference between VWM and low-level perception. Specifically, for both maintained colours and orientations, presenting a distractor created bias in VWM representation depending on the similarity between incoming and maintained information, consistent with the known tuning curves for these features. Moreover, holding an item in mind directly altered the appearance of new stimuli, demonstrated by changes in psychophysical discrimination thresholds. Thus, as a consequence of sharing the early visual cortices, what you see and what you are holding in mind are intertwined at even the most fundamental stages of processing.

Source: https://neurosciencenews.com/perception-working-memory-14514/


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