repulsion effect
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2022 ◽  
pp. 174702182210761
Author(s):  
Rebecca Lawrence ◽  
Lucas R Schneider ◽  
Jay Pratt

The attention repulsion effect (ARE) refers to distortions in the perception of space for areas nearby the focus of attention. For instance, when attending to the right-hand side of the visual field, objects in central vision may appear as though they are shifted to the left. The phenomenon is likely caused by changes in visual cell functioning. To date, research on the ARE has almost exclusively used exogenous manipulations of attention. In contrast, research exploring endogenous attention repulsion has been mixed, and no research has explored the effects of non-predictive arrow cues on this phenomenon. This gap in the literature is unexpected, as symbolic attention appears to be a unique form of attentional orienting compared to endogenous and exogenous attention. Therefore, the current study explored the effects of symbolic orienting on spatial repulsion and compared it to an exogenously generated ARE. Across four experiments, both exogenous and symbolic orienting resulted in AREs; however, the magnitude of the symbolic ARE was smaller than the exogenous ARE. This difference in magnitude persisted, even after testing both phenomena using stimulus timing parameters known to produce optimal effects in traditional attentional cueing paradigms. Therefore, compared to symbolic attention, it appears that exogenous manipulations may tightly constrict attention resources on the cued location, in turn potentially influencing the functioning of visual cells for enhanced perceptual processing.


2022 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
pp. 0
Author(s):  
Aichao Liu ◽  
Binxiang Dai ◽  
Yuming Chen

<p style='text-indent:20px;'>This paper deals with a class of attraction-repulsion chemotaxis systems in a smoothly bounded domain. When the system is parabolic-elliptic-parabolic-elliptic and the domain is <inline-formula><tex-math id="M1">\begin{document}$ n $\end{document}</tex-math></inline-formula>-dimensional, if the repulsion effect is strong enough then the solutions of the system are globally bounded. Meanwhile, when the system is fully parabolic and the domain is either one-dimensional or two-dimensional, the system also possesses a globally bounded classical solution.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rahul Bhui ◽  
Yang Xiang

The attraction effect occurs when the presence of an inferior option (the decoy) increases the attractiveness of the option that dominates it (the target). Despite its prominence in behavioral science, recent evidence points to the puzzling existence of the opposite phenomenon—a repulsion effect. In this paper, we formally develop and experimentally test a normative account of the repulsion effect. Our theory is based on the idea that the true values of options are uncertain and must be inferred from available information, which includes the properties of other options. A low-value decoy can signal that the target also has low value when both are believed to be generated by a similar process. We formalize this logic using a hierarchical Bayesian cognitive model that makes predictions about how the strength of the repulsion effect should vary with statistical properties of the decision problem. This theory may help account for several documented phenomena linked to the repulsion effect across both economic and perceptual decision making, as well as new experimental data. Our results shed light on the key drivers of context-dependent judgment across multiple domains and sharpen our understanding of when decoys can be detrimental.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sangkyu Son ◽  
Joonyeol Lee ◽  
Oh-Sang Kwon ◽  
Yee Joon Kim

The recent visual past has a strong impact on our current perception. Recent studies of serial dependence in perception show that low-level adaptation repels our current perception away from previous stimuli whereas post-perceptual decision attracts perceptual report toward the immediate past. In their studies, these repulsive and attractive biases were observed with different task demands perturbing ongoing sequential process. Therefore, it is unclear whether the opposite biases arise naturally in navigating complex real-life environments. Here we only manipulated the environmental statistics to characterize how serially dependent perceptual decisions unfold in spatiotemporally changing visual environments. During sequential mean orientation adjustment task on the array of Gabor patches, we found that the repulsion effect dominated only when ensemble variance increased across consecutive trials whereas the attraction effect prevailed when ensemble variance decreased or remained the same. The observed attractive bias by high-to-low-variance stimuli and repulsive bias by low-to-high-variance stimuli were reinforced by the repeated exposure to the low and the high ensemble variance, respectively. Further, this variance-dependent differential pattern of serial dependence in ensemble representation remained the same regardless of whether observers had a prior knowledge of environmental statistics or not. We used a Bayesian observer model constrained by visual adaptation to provide a unifying account of both attractive and repulsive bias in perception. Our results establish that the temporal integration and segregation of visual information is flexibly adjusted through variance adaptation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guoqing Gao ◽  
Liangshuang Yin ◽  
Jun Cheng ◽  
Rui Tao ◽  
Yu Liu ◽  
...  

Rationale: Among the serious consequences of alcohol use disorder (AUD) is the reduced ability to process visual information. It is also generally agreed that AUD tends to occur with disturbed excitation–inhibition (EI) balance in the central nervous system. Thus, a specific visual behavioral probe could directly qualify the EI dysfunction in patients with AUD. The tilt illusion (TI) is a paradigmatic example of contextual influences on perception of central target. The phenomenon shows a characteristic dependence on the angle between the inducing surround stimulus and the central target test. For small angles, there is a repulsion effect; for larger angles, there is a smaller attraction effect. The center-surround inhibition in tilt repulsion is considered to come from spatial orientational interactions between orientation-tuned neurons in the primary visual cortex (V1), and tilt attraction is from higher-level effects of orientation processing in the visual information processing.Objectives: The present study focuses on visual spatial information processing and explores whether chronic AUD patients in abstinence period exhibited abnormal TI compared with healthy controls.Methods: The participants are 30 male volunteers (20–46 years old) divided into two groups: the study group consists of 15 clinically diagnosed AUD patients undergoing abstinence from alcohol, and the control group consists of 15 healthy volunteers. The TI consists of a center target surround with an annulus (both target and annulus are sinusoidal grating with spatial frequency = 2 cycles per degree). The visual angle between center and surround is a variable restricted to 0°, ±15°, ±30°, or ±75°. For measuring the TI, participants have to report whether the center target grating orientation tilted clockwise or counterclockwise from the internal vertical orientation by pressing corresponding keys on the computer keyboard. No feedback is provided regarding response correctness.Results: The results reveal significantly weaker tilt repulsion effect under surround orientation ±15° (p &lt; 0.05) and higher lapse rate (attention limitation index) under all tested surround orientations (all ps &lt; 0.05) in patients with chronic AUD compared with health controls.Conclusions: These results provide psychophysical evidence that visual perception of center-contextual stimuli is different between AUD and healthy control groups.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mikhail S. Spektor ◽  
David Kellen ◽  
Karl Christoph Klauer

People rely on the choice context to guide their decisions, violating fundamental principles of rational choice theory and exhibiting phenomena called context effects. Recent research has uncovered that dominance relationships can both increase or decrease the choice share of the dominating option, marking the two ends of an attraction–repulsion continuum. However, theoretical accounts and empirical links between the two opposing effects are missing. The present study (N = 55) used eye tracking and a within-subject design of a perceptual task and its preferential counterpart to bridge this gap and uncover the information-search processes underlying choices. Although individuals differed in their perceptual and preferential choices, a repulsion effect was present in both conditions and they generally engaged in alternative-wise comparisons. Repulsion effects became weaker the more predominant the attribute-wise comparisons were. Altogether, our study highlights how repulsion effects can occur even in preferential choices when people have to rely on perceptual information.


2020 ◽  
Vol 170 ◽  
pp. 46-52 ◽  
Author(s):  
Denise Baumeler ◽  
Josef G. Schönhammer ◽  
Sabine Born

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