Journal article

Repulsive Serial Effects in Visual Numerosity Judgments


Authors listValsecchi, Matteo; Stucchi, Natale; Scocchia, Lisa

Publication year2018

Pages780-788

JournalPerception

Volume number47

Issue number7

ISSN0301-0066

eISSN1468-4233

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1177/0301006618775235

PublisherSAGE Publications


Abstract
We investigated how the approximate perceived numerosity of ensembles of visual elements is modulated by the numerosity of previously viewed ensembles depending on whether the first ensemble is held in visual working memory or not. We show that the numerosity of the previously seen ensemble has a repulsive effect, that is, a stimulus with high numerosity induces an underestimation of the following one and vice versa. This repulsive effect is present regardless of whether the first stimulus is memorized or not. While subtle changes of the experimental paradigm can have major consequences for the nature of interstimulus dependencies in perception, generally speaking the fact that we found such effects in a visual numerosity estimation task confirms that the process by which human observers produce estimates of the number of elements bears analogies to the processes that lead to the perception of visual dimensions such as orientation.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleValsecchi, M., Stucchi, N. and Scocchia, L. (2018) Repulsive Serial Effects in Visual Numerosity Judgments, Perception, 47(7), pp. 780-788. https://doi.org/10.1177/0301006618775235

APA Citation styleValsecchi, M., Stucchi, N., & Scocchia, L. (2018). Repulsive Serial Effects in Visual Numerosity Judgments. Perception. 47(7), 780-788. https://doi.org/10.1177/0301006618775235



Keywords


sequential effects

Last updated on 2025-02-04 at 01:20