Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4034065 Vision Research 2012 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

Prolonged inspection of moving stimuli causes stationary stimuli to appear moving in the opposite direction to the adapting stimulus (the Waterfall effect). It has been claimed that distracting the viewer’s attention from the adapting stimulus by a secondary task reduces the strength of adaptation. However, the method used to show the effect of distraction (the duration of the aftereffect) is potentially susceptible to bias. The experiments reported here show no effect in genuinely naïve subjects, or in experienced observers using a variety of cancellation procedures to measure the effect.

► Adapting to a moving stimulus causes an aftereffect in the opposite direction. ► It has been claimed that this effect depends on attention to the adaptor. ► This effect is not replicated in three separate studies. ► Previous positive findings may depend on subject biases.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Sensory Systems
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