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Implicit and explicit object recognition at very large visual eccentricities: No improvement after loss of central vision

, , , &
Pages 839-858 | Received 01 May 2008, Accepted 01 Aug 2009, Published online: 12 Oct 2009
 

Abstract

Little is known about the ability of human observers to process objects in the far periphery of their visual field and nothing about its evolution in case of central vision loss. We investigated implicit and explicit recognition at two large visual eccentricities. Pictures of objects were centred at 30° or 50° eccentricity. Implicit recognition was tested through a priming paradigm. Participants (normally sighted observers and people with 10–20 years of central vision loss) categorized pictures as animal/transport both in a study phase (Block 1) and in a test phase (Block 2). In explicit recognition participants decided for each picture presented in Block 2 whether it had been displayed in Block 1 (“yes”/“no”). Both visual (identical) and conceptual/lexical (same-name) priming occurred at 30° and at 50°. Explicit recognition was observed only at 30°. In people with central vision loss testing was only performed at 50° eccentricity. The pattern of results was similar to that of normally sighted observers but global performance was lower. The results suggest that vision, at large eccentricity, is mainly based on nonconscious coarse representations. Moreover, after 10–20 years of central vision loss, no evidence was found for an increased ability to use peripheral information in object recognition.

Acknowledgements

The study was funded by the CNRS, a grant (Cogniscience program No. Cog.35) to the first and the last authors and a grant from CNRS (No. CT-103-15) to the first author. FN was supported by a PhD graduate fellowship from Lille Hospital and region Nord-Pas de Calais, France.

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