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Visual perception is thought to be supported by a stabilization mechanism integrating information over time, resulting in a systematic attractive bias in experimental contexts. Previous studies show that this effect, whereby a current stimulus appears more similar to the one previous to it, depends on attention, suggesting an active high-level mechanism that modulates perception. Here, we test the hypothesis that such a mechanism generalizes across different stimulus formats or sensory modalities, effectively abstracting from the low-level properties of the stimuli. Participants performed a numerosity discrimination task, with task-relevant dot-array stimuli preceded by a sequence of visual (flashes) or auditory (tones) stimuli encompassing different numerosities. Our results show a clear attractive bias induced by visual sequential numerosity affecting an array of simultaneously presented dots, thus operating across different stimulus formats. Conversely, auditory sequences did not affect the judgment on visual numerosities. Overall, our results demonstrate that serial dependence in numerosity perception operates according to the abstract representation of numerical magnitude of visual stimuli irrespective of their format. These results thus support the idea that a high-level mechanism mediates visual stability and continuity, which integrates relevant information over time irrespective of the low-level sensory properties of the stimuli.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.visres.2019.04.011 | DOI Listing |
Adv Mater
September 2025
Life-Like Materials and Systems, Department of Chemistry, University of Mainz, Duesbergweg 10-14, 55128, Mainz, Germany.
Movement is essential for living systems, enabling access to food, habitats, or escape from threats. Across scales, a key unifying principle is symmetry breaking to achieve non-reciprocal motion and accumulate work. In soft robotics, many actuators mimic biological responsiveness, but they typically exhibit reciprocal motion, where forward work is canceled in the return stroke - preventing work accumulation in cyclic operation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCognition
August 2025
Ohio State University, United States of America. Electronic address:
In much recent philosophy of mind and cognitive science, repulsive adaptation effects are considered a litmus test - a crucial marker, that distinguishes what is perceived from what is judged at the level of post-perceptual thought or cognition. Here, we provide evidence for a form of adaptation that challenges this contention. Across four experiments, we found consistent evidence of adaptation to a seemingly imperceptible dimension: arbitrarily assigned value.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPalliat Support Care
August 2025
Department of Biobehavioral Nursing Science, College of Nursing, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA.
Objectives: Awareness of death shapes our existence; it prompts both distress and a maturation process called existential maturation. Presently, direct quantitative measures of existential maturation are unavailable to study treatments for existential distress that enhance psychological well-being. We examined the effect of a mortality salience stimulus on implicit death thoughts over time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCereb Cortex
August 2025
Department of Psychology, University of Nevada, Reno, Mail Stop 296, 1664 N. Virginia Street, Reno, NV 89502, United States.
Physical distance and real-world size are important visual cues for object perception and action. Yet most studies of vision rely on pictorial stimuli that are not relevant for action, and whose distance and size are ambiguous. We used functional MRI to explore how the human brain represents object information when the stimuli are real objects versus two-dimensional pictures, and when the stimuli appear at different physical distances from the observer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
August 2025
Department of Psychology, University of Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany.
Facial features transmit emotions but their effect on visual orienting and explicit emotion recognition is debated. Here we examined whether fixating on diagnostic features of emotional expressions-such as eye region for fear and the mouth for happiness-affects saccadic targeting and improves recognition accuracy. Across two pre-registered experiments, participants viewed fearful, happy, and neutral faces for short intervals (50 or 150 ms) while the initial fixation location was manipulated.
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