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Ambiguity is a linking feature for interocular grouping.

Sunny M Lee1,2, Emily Slezak1,3, Steven K Shevell1,4,5

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Neural ambiguity aids perception. This study shows that ambiguous neural signals, not unambiguous ones, help group similar percepts, suggesting ambiguity itself is key for disambiguation.

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Area of Science:

  • Neuroscience
  • Visual Perception
  • Cognitive Science

Background:

  • Neural representations of the physical world often contain ambiguity.
  • The visual system resolves ambiguous signals for features like color and form.
  • The role of unambiguous neural signals in resolving perceptual ambiguity is understudied.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate how unambiguous neural representations influence the resolution of ambiguous ones.
  • To measure perceptual grouping of ambiguous chromatic representations.
  • To test if unambiguous chromaticity attracts ambiguous percepts.

Main Methods:

  • Created chromatically ambiguous representations using interocular switch rivalry.
  • Presented ambiguous regions with nearby unambiguous chromaticity.
  • Compared grouping magnitude of ambiguous regions presented alone versus with unambiguous regions.

Main Results:

  • Ambiguous chromatic regions consistently appeared identical to each other.
  • The appearance of ambiguous regions was not attracted to the unambiguous color percept.
  • Contrary to theory, unambiguous signals did not guide the resolution of ambiguous ones.

Conclusions:

  • Ambiguity within neural representations acts as a linking feature.
  • This inherent ambiguity contributes to perceptual disambiguation.
  • The visual system may leverage ambiguity for grouping and resolving percepts.