Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4034010 Vision Research 2012 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Although feedback is considered to be an important factor in perceptual learning (PL), its role is normally considered limited to facilitation, rather than direct inducement, of PL. Recent studies, however, have suggested feedback to be more actively involved in the inducement of PL. The current study demonstrates an even more significant role for feedback in PL: feedback can evoke PL of a feature without any bottom-up processing of that feature. We use a “fake feedback” method, in which the feedback is related to an arbitrarily chosen feature, rather than actual performance. We find evidence of PL with this fake feedback method both when the learned feature is absent from the visual stimulus (Experiment 1) and when it conflicts with the visual stimulus (Experiment 2). We call this “feedback-based PL,” in contrast with the classical “exposure-based PL.” We find that feedback-based PL and exposure-based PL can occur independently of each other even while occurring in the same paradigm. These results suggest that feedback not only facilitates PL that is evoked by bottom-up information, but that it can directly induce PL, where such feedback-based PL occurs independently of exposure-based PL.

► We showed only feedback can evoke perceptual learning without bottom-up processing. ► We explored perceptual learning for a feature presented only in feedback. ► Training trials had just noise, but fake feedback indicated it was an oriented grating. ► After training, performance for an orientation of fake feedback improved. ► This feedback-based learning was independent of exposure-based perceptual learning.

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