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Electrophysiological priming effects demonstrate independence and overlap of visual regularity representations in the extrastriate cortex

Alexis D. J. Makin, John Tyson‐Carr, Yiovanna Derpsch, Giulia Rampone, Marco Bertamini

2021PLoS ONE11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

An Event Related Potential (ERP) component called the Sustained Posterior Negativity (SPN) is generated by regular visual patterns (e.g. vertical reflectional symmetry, horizontal reflectional symmetry or rotational symmetry). Behavioural studies suggest symmetry becomes increasingly salient when the exemplars update rapidly. In line with this, Experiment 1 (N = 48) found that SPN amplitude increased when three different reflectional symmetry patterns were presented sequentially. We call this effect 'SPN priming'. We then exploited SPN priming to investigate independence of different symmetry representations. SPN priming did not survive changes in retinal location (Experiment 2, N = 48) or non-orthogonal changes in axis orientation (Experiment 3, N = 48). However, SPN priming transferred between vertical and horizontal axis orientations (Experiment 4, N = 48) and between reflectional and rotational symmetry (Experiment 5, N = 48). SPN priming is interesting in itself, and a useful new method for identifying functional boundaries of the symmetry response. We conclude that visual regularities at different retinal locations are coded independently. However, there is some overlap between different regularities presented at the same retinal location.

Topics & Concepts

Symmetry (geometry)Reflection symmetryPriming (agriculture)ElectrophysiologyExtrastriate cortexNeuroscienceOrientation (vector space)PhysicsEvent-related potentialPsychologyVisual cortexMathematicsCommunicationComputer scienceGeometryBiologyElectroencephalographyGerminationBotanyVisual perception and processing mechanismsNeural dynamics and brain functionNeural and Behavioral Psychology Studies
Electrophysiological priming effects demonstrate independence and overlap of visual regularity representations in the extrastriate cortex | Litcius