ACASTER, Steph, TAROYAN, Naira, SORANZO, Alessandro and REIDY, John (2021). Behavioural and Electrophysiological Correlates of Lightness Contrast and Assimilation. Experimental Brain Research, 239 (11), 3205-3220. [Article]
Documents
28939:592442
PDF
Acaster-BehaviouralAndElectrophysiological(VoR).pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
Acaster-BehaviouralAndElectrophysiological(VoR).pdf - Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution.
Download (2MB) | Preview
Abstract
Lightness contrast and assimilation are opposite phenomena: in contrast grey targets appear
darker when bordering bright rather than dark surfaces; in assimilation grey targets appear
lighter when bordering bright rather than dark surfaces. The underlying neurophysiological
mechanisms of these phenomena are not known. The aim of this study was to investigate the
relationship between contrast and assimilation, and the timing and levels of perceptual and
cognitive processing using combined behavioural and electrophysiological methods. Thirty
undergraduate students (23 female, age range 18-48 years old) participated in a forced-choice
(grey target is lighter/darker than a comparison square) task, using stimuli designed such that the
inducers were in two configurations (small and large) and two shades (white and black). The
behavioural data (more consistent and faster responses) corroborated previous findings of
stronger contrast effects with white inducers and stronger assimilation effects with black
inducers. According to the Event Related Potentials (ERP) results the mean amplitude was larger
in conditions with less consistent and slower behavioural responses. Thus, with contrast
responses P1 amplitude was larger with black than white inducers, and N1 amplitude was larger
to assimilation than contrast when the configuration of the stimulus was held constant. These
results suggest contrast may occur as early as P1 (~110 ms) and assimilation may occur later in
N2 (~220 ms), whereas in some conditions, differences in ERPs associated with contrast versus
assimilation may happen as early as in N1 (~170m), in occipital and parietal cortical sites.
More Information
Statistics
Downloads
Downloads per month over past year
Metrics
Altmetric Badge
Dimensions Badge
Share
Actions (login required)
View Item |