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How visual action shapes active vision

Descripción del proyecto

Análisis de las acciones visuales para entender la percepción

Las acciones visuales son esenciales para nuestra capacidad de ver, como mirar rápidamente el reloj para comprobar la hora o darse la vuelta al escuchar nuestro nombre. El proyecto VIS-A-VIS, financiado con fondos europeos, investigará las distintas reglas cinemáticas que rigen las acciones visuales cuando regulan directamente la información que se envía al sistema visual. El proyecto formará un equipo interdisciplinario y aplicará tecnología, herramientas y protocolos experimentales innovadores para estudiar la forma en que el sistema visual activo aprende y aplica la relación entre las acciones visuales y sus respuestas sensoriales para establecer procesos perceptivos básicos como la omisión perceptiva, la permanencia del objeto y el sentido de agencia. Revelará la forma en que las propiedades de las acciones visuales se entrelazan con los procesos de percepción visual.

Objetivo

A key component of visual perception is our ability to move: In a flick of the eye, we see the time on the watch, and we quickly turn around if we hear our name in the crowd. Whereas other movements aim to change the state of the world, visual actions shift our eyes, heads, and bodies to align the retina with currently relevant parts of the world. Although they vitally extend the scope of high-acuity vision, their immediate sensory consequences have challenged scientists for centuries: How do we not experience the brisk motion of the entire scene on the retina every time the eyes move (perceptual omission)? How does the brain keep track of objects’ changing retinal locations across consecutive glances (object continuity). And how do we routinely attribute retinal motion to our own movements rather than to motion in the world (sense of agency). To explain these phenomena, research and theories across disciplines have focused on how the brain—using its knowledge about ongoing movement plans—predicts and compensates for undesirable side effects of visual actions. I pursue a radically new perspective based on a key insight: Visual actions follow distinct kinematic rules, and as every visual action translates directly into a movement of the world on the retinal image, these rules also directly govern the sensory input. Their sensory consequences can thus be distinguished from motion in the world based on the rules they follow. In embracing this idea, I challenge the long-standing idea that visual actions are a nuisance to sensory processing and propose instead that they support core functions in active vision. In an interdisciplinary team, we will leverage innovative technology, state-of-the-art psychophysical tools and robust experimental protocols to find out if and how the active visual system learns and exploits the lawful relation between visual actions and their sensory consequences, to establish perceptual omission, object continuity, and the sense of agency.

Régimen de financiación

ERC-COG - Consolidator Grant

Institución de acogida

HUMBOLDT-UNIVERSITAET ZU BERLIN
Aportación neta de la UEn
€ 2 000 000,00
Dirección
UNTER DEN LINDEN 6
10117 Berlin
Alemania

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Región
Berlin Berlin Berlin
Tipo de actividad
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Enlaces
Coste total
€ 2 000 000,00

Beneficiarios (1)