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Author |
Awasthi, Bhuvanesh; Friedman, Jason; Williams, Mark A |
Title |
Processing of low spatial frequency faces at periphery in choice reaching tasks |
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Journal Article |
Year |
2011 |
Publication |
Neuropsychologia |
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Volume |
49 |
Issue |
7 |
Pages |
2136-2141 |
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Abstract |
Various aspects of face processing have been associated with distinct ranges of spatial frequencies. Configural processing of faces depends chiefly on low spatial frequency (LSF) information whereas high spatial frequency (HSF) supports feature based processing. However, it has also been argued that face processing has a foveal-bias (HSF channels dominate the fovea). Here we used reach trajectories as a continuous behavioral measure to study perceptual processing of faces. Experimental stimuli were LSF–HSF hybrids of male and female faces superimposed and were presented peripherally and centrally. Subject reached out to touch a specified sex and their movements were recorded. The reaching trajectories reveal that there is less effect of (interference by) LSF faces at fovea as compared to periphery while reaching to HSF targets. These results demonstrate that peripherally presented LSF information, carried chiefly by magnocellular channels, enables efficient processing of faces, possibly via a retinotectal (subcortical) pathway. |
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Author |
Friedman, Jason; Brown, Scott; Finkbeiner, Matthew |
Title |
Linking cognitive and reaching trajectories via intermittent movement control |
Type |
Journal Article |
Year |
2013 |
Publication |
Journal of Mathematical Psychology |
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Volume |
57 |
Issue |
3-4 |
Pages |
140-151 |
Keywords |
Decision making; Diffusion model; Reaction times; Arm movements; Submovements |
Abstract |
Theories of decision-making have traditionally been constrained by reaction time data. A limitation of reaction time data, particularly for studying the temporal dynamics of cognitive processing, is that they index only the endpoint of the decision making process. Recently, physical reaching trajectories have been used as proxies for underlying mental trajectories through decision space. We suggest that this approach has been oversimplified: while it is possible for the motor control system to access the current state of the evidence accumulation process, this access is intermittent. Instead, we demonstrate how a model of arm movements that assumes intermittent, not continuous, access to the decision process is sufficient to describe the effects of stimulus quality and viewing time in curved reaching movements. |
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