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Serial reproduction reveals the geometry of visuospatial representations

Thomas A. Langlois, Nori Jacoby, Jordan W. Suchow, Thomas L. Griffiths

2021Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

An essential function of the human visual system is to locate objects in space and navigate the environment. Due to limited resources, the visual system achieves this by combining imperfect sensory information with a belief state about locations in a scene, resulting in systematic distortions and biases. These biases can be captured by a Bayesian model in which internal beliefs are expressed in a prior probability distribution over locations in a scene. We introduce a paradigm that enables us to measure these priors by iterating a simple memory task where the response of one participant becomes the stimulus for the next. This approach reveals an unprecedented richness and level of detail in these priors, suggesting a different way to think about biases in spatial memory. A prior distribution on locations in a visual scene can reflect the selective allocation of coding resources to different visual regions during encoding ("efficient encoding"). This selective allocation predicts that locations in the scene will be encoded with variable precision, in contrast to previous work that has assumed fixed encoding precision regardless of location. We demonstrate that perceptual biases covary with variations in discrimination accuracy, a finding that is aligned with simulations of our efficient encoding model but not the traditional fixed encoding view. This work demonstrates the promise of using nonparametric data-driven approaches that combine crowdsourcing with the careful curation of information transmission within social networks to reveal the hidden structure of shared visual representations.

Topics & Concepts

Prior probabilityComputer scienceEncoding (memory)Artificial intelligenceCoding (social sciences)PerceptionBayesian probabilityBayesian inferenceSpatial analysisPattern recognition (psychology)Computer visionMathematicsPsychologyStatisticsNeuroscienceVisual perception and processing mechanismsVisual Attention and Saliency DetectionData Visualization and Analytics
Serial reproduction reveals the geometry of visuospatial representations | Litcius