The subjective experience of object recognition: comparing metacognition for object detection and object categorization

  • Meuwese, Julia Di I.
  • van Loon, Anouk M.
  • Lamme, Victor Af F.
  • Fahrenfort, Johannes J.
Publication date
January 2014

Abstract

Perceptual decisions seem to be made automatically and almost instantly. Constructing a unitary subjective conscious experience takes more time. For example, when trying to avoid a collision with a car on a foggy road you brake or steer away in a reflex, before realizing you were in a near accident. This subjective aspect of object recognition has been given little attention. We used metacognition (assessed with confidence ratings) to measure subjective experience during object detection and object categorization for degraded and masked objects, while objective performance was matched. Metacognition was equal for degraded and masked objects, but categorization led to higher metacognition than did detection. This effect turned out to be driv...

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