Multidimensional feature interactions in visual crowding: When  configural  cues  eliminate the polarity advantage.

Rummens, Koen; Sayim, Bilge (2022). Multidimensional feature interactions in visual crowding: When  configural  cues  eliminate the polarity advantage. Journal of vision, 22(6), p. 2. ARVO 10.1167/jov.22.6.2

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Crowding occurs when surrounding objects (flankers) impair target perception. A key property of crowding is the weaker interference when target and flankers strongly differ on a given dimension. For instance, identification of a target letter is usually superior with flankers of opposite versus the same contrast polarity as the target (the "polarity advantage"). High performance when target-flanker similarity is low has been attributed to the ungrouping of target and flankers. Here, we show that configural cues can override the usual advantage of low target-flanker similarity, and strong target-flanker grouping can reduce - instead of exacerbate - crowding. In Experiment 1, observers were presented with line triplets in the periphery and reported the tilt (left or right) of the central line. Target and flankers had the same (uniform condition) or opposite contrast polarity (alternating condition). Flanker configurations were either upright (||), unidirectionally tilted (\\ or //), or bidirectionally tilted (\/ or /\). Upright flankers yielded stronger crowding than unidirectional flankers, and weaker crowding than bidirectional flankers. Importantly, our results revealed a clear interaction between contrast polarity and flanker configuration. Triplets with upright and bidirectional flankers, but not unidirectional flankers, showed the polarity advantage. In Experiments 2 and 3, we showed that emergent features and redundancy masking (i.e. the reduction of the number of perceived items in repeating configurations) made it easier to discriminate between uniform triplets when flanker tilts were unidirectional (but not when bidirectional). We propose that the spatial configurations of uniform triplets with unidirectional flankers provided sufficient task-relevant information to enable a similar performance as with alternating triplets: strong-target flanker grouping alleviated crowding. We suggest that features which modulate crowding strength can interact non-additively, limiting the validity of typical crowding rules to contexts where only single, independent dimensions determine the effects of target-flanker similarity.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

07 Faculty of Human Sciences > Institute of Psychology > Cognitive Psychology, Perception and Methodology
07 Faculty of Human Sciences > Institute of Psychology > Weitere Forschungsgruppen

UniBE Contributor:

Rummens, Koen, Sayim, Bilge

Subjects:

100 Philosophy > 150 Psychology

ISSN:

1534-7362

Publisher:

ARVO

Language:

English

Submitter:

Pubmed Import

Date Deposited:

04 May 2022 09:18

Last Modified:

05 Dec 2022 16:19

Publisher DOI:

10.1167/jov.22.6.2

PubMed ID:

35503508

BORIS DOI:

10.48350/169712

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/169712

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