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Exogenous attention facilitates location transfer of perceptual learning

Perceptual skills can be improved through practice on a perceptual task, even in adulthood. Visual perceptual learning is known to be mostly specific to the trained retinal location, which is considered as evidence of neural plasticity in retinotopic early visual cortex. Recent findings demonstrate...

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Published in:Journal of vision (Charlottesville, Va.) Va.), 2015-01, Vol.15 (10), p.11-11
Main Authors: Donovan, Ian, Szpiro, Sarit, Carrasco, Marisa
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Szpiro, Sarit
Carrasco, Marisa
description Perceptual skills can be improved through practice on a perceptual task, even in adulthood. Visual perceptual learning is known to be mostly specific to the trained retinal location, which is considered as evidence of neural plasticity in retinotopic early visual cortex. Recent findings demonstrate that transfer of learning to untrained locations can occur under some specific training procedures. Here, we evaluated whether exogenous attention facilitates transfer of perceptual learning to untrained locations, both adjacent to the trained locations (Experiment 1) and distant from them (Experiment 2). The results reveal that attention facilitates transfer of perceptual learning to untrained locations in both experiments, and that this transfer occurs both within and across visual hemifields. These findings show that training with exogenous attention is a powerful regime that is able to overcome the major limitation of location specificity.
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subjects Attention - physiology
Discrimination Learning - physiology
Female
Humans
Male
Neuronal Plasticity
Transfer, Psychology
Visual Cortex - physiology
Visual Perception - physiology
Young Adult
title Exogenous attention facilitates location transfer of perceptual learning
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