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More evidence for sensorimotor adaptation in color perception.

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TLDR
It is shown that sensorim motor adaptation can be obtained for color, as a consequence of the introduction of a new sensorimotor contingency between eye movements and color changes.
Abstract
Sensorimotor adaptation can be defined as a perceptual adaptation whose effects depend on the occurrence and nature of the performed motor actions. Examples of sensorimotor adaptation can be found in the literature on prisms concerning several space-related attributes like orientation, curvature, and size. In this article, we show that sensorimotor adaptation can be obtained for color, as a consequence of the introduction of a new sensorimotor contingency between eye movements and color changes. In an adaptation phase, trials involved the successive presentation of two patches, first on the left, and then on the right or the opposite. The left patch being always red and the right patch green, a correlation is introduced between left–right (respectively right–left) eye saccades and red–green (respectively green–red) color change. After 40 min of adaptation, when two yellow patches are successively presented on each side of the screen, the chromaticity of the left and right patches need respectively to be shifted toward the chromaticity of the red and green adaptation patches for subjective equality to be obtained. When the eyes are kept fixed during the adaptation stage, creating a strong nonhomogeneity in retinal adaptation, no effect is found. This ensures that, if present, adaptation at a given retinal location cannot explain the present effect. A third experiment shows a dependency of the effect on the eyes' saccadic movements and not on the position on the screen, that is, on the position of the eyes in the orbits. These results argue for the involvement of sensorimotor mechanisms in color perception. The relation of these experimental findings toward a sensorimotor theory of color perception is discussed.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Systematic biases in adult color perception persist despite lifelong information sufficient to calibrate them

TL;DR: By modeling cone responses to the spectra of everyday stimuli, this work quantify the degree of calibration possible from visual exposure, and therefore the perceptual color distortion that should occur with and without recalibration and finds that perceptual distortions were halfway between those predicted from bare adaptation and from learning.
Journal ArticleDOI

How to Build a Robot that is Conscious and Feels

TL;DR: This article takes a pragmatic, scientist’s point of view about the concepts of consciousness and “feel”, pinning down what people generally mean when they talk about these concepts, and investigating to what extent these capacities could be implemented in non-biological machines.
Journal ArticleDOI

Synesthesia, sensory-motor contingency and semantic emulation: How swimming style-color synesthesia challenges the traditional view of synesthesia

TL;DR: The hypothesis is developed that the wide-ranging phenomenon of synesthesia might result from a process of hyperbinding between “too many” semantic attribute domains, supplemented by some suggestions for an underlying neural mechanism.
Journal ArticleDOI

Associating peripheral and foveal visual input across saccades: a default mode of the human visual system?

TL;DR: Interestingly, visual search performance revealed that neither disruption of temporal object continuity nor disruption of spatial object continuity (shape change) impaired transsaccadic learning, which seems to be a very robust default mechanism of the visual system that is probably related to the more general concept of action-effect learning.
Book ChapterDOI

The Cambridge Handbook of Situated Cognition: Situated Perception and Sensation in Vision and Other Modalities

TL;DR: Situated cognition has become an important concept in educational theory, and one of the most frequently cited philosophers in this context is John Dewey as mentioned in this paper, who uses the notion of a problematic situation to describe how cognition involves coping with unfamiliar circumstances.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Psychophysics Toolbox.

David H. Brainard
- 01 Jan 1997 - 
TL;DR: The Psychophysics Toolbox is a software package that supports visual psychophysics and its routines provide an interface between a high-level interpreted language and the video display hardware.
Journal ArticleDOI

The VideoToolbox software for visual psychophysics: transforming numbers into movies.

TL;DR: The VideoToolbox is a free collection of two hundred C subroutines for Macintosh computers that calibrates and controls the computer-display interface to create accurately specified visual stimuli.
Book

Pattern recognition and neural networks

TL;DR: Professor Ripley brings together two crucial ideas in pattern recognition; statistical methods and machine learning via neural networks in this self-contained account.
Journal Article

A sensorimotor account of vision and visual consciousness-Authors' Response-Acting out our sensory experience

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose that the brain produces an internal representation of the world, and the activation of this internal representation is assumed to give rise to the experience of seeing, but it leaves unexplained how the existence of such a detailed internal representation might produce visual consciousness.
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