Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4036290 Vision Research 2007 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

Perceptual learning is an improvement in perceptual task performance reflecting plasticity in the perceptual system. Practice effects were studied in two object orientation tasks: a first order, luminance object task and a second-order, texture object task. Perceptual learning was small or absent in the first-order task, but consistently occurred for the second-order (texture) task, where it was limited to improvements in low external noise conditions, or stimulus enhancement [Dosher, B., & Lu, Z. -L. (1998). Perceptual learning reflects external noise filtering and internal noise reduction through channel reweighting. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 95 (23) 13988–13993; Dosher, B., & Lu, Z. -L. (1999). Mechanisms of perceptual learning. Vision Research, 39 (19) 3197–3221], analogous to attention effects in first- and second-order motion processing [Lu, Z. -L., Liu, C. Q., & Dosher, B. (2000). Attention mechanisms for multi-location first- and second-order motion perception. Vision Research, 40 (2) 173–186]. Perceptual learning affected the later, post-rectification, stages of perceptual analysis, possibly localized at V2 or above. It serves to amplify the stimulus relative to limiting internal noise for intrinsically noisy representations of second-order stimuli.

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