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Temporal Integration Windows for Naturalistic Visual Sequences

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  • Scott L Fairhall
  • Angela Albi
  • David Melcher

Abstract

There is increasing evidence that the brain possesses mechanisms to integrate incoming sensory information as it unfolds over time-periods of 2–3 seconds. The ubiquity of this mechanism across modalities, tasks, perception and production has led to the proposal that it may underlie our experience of the subjective present. A critical test of this claim is that this phenomenon should be apparent in naturalistic visual experiences. We tested this using movie-clips as a surrogate for our day-to-day experience, temporally scrambling them to require (re-) integration within and beyond the hypothesized 2–3 second interval. Two independent experiments demonstrate a step-wise increase in the difficulty to follow stimuli at the hypothesized 2–3 second scrambling condition. Moreover, only this difference could not be accounted for by low-level visual properties. This provides the first evidence that this 2–3 second integration window extends to complex, naturalistic visual sequences more consistent with our experience of the subjective present.

Suggested Citation

  • Scott L Fairhall & Angela Albi & David Melcher, 2014. "Temporal Integration Windows for Naturalistic Visual Sequences," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 9(7), pages 1-6, July.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0102248
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0102248
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    1. Benjamin Lahner & Kshitij Dwivedi & Polina Iamshchinina & Monika Graumann & Alex Lascelles & Gemma Roig & Alessandro Thomas Gifford & Bowen Pan & SouYoung Jin & N. Apurva Ratan Murty & Kendrick Kay & , 2024. "Modeling short visual events through the BOLD moments video fMRI dataset and metadata," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 15(1), pages 1-26, December.

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