Forming expectations about what we are likely to perceive often facilitates perception. We forge such expectations on the basis of strong statistical relationships between events in our environment. However, due to our ever-changing world these relationships often subsequently degrade or even disappear, yet it is unclear how these altered statistics influence perceptual expectations. We examined this question across two studies by training participants in perfect relationships between actions (index or little finger abductions) and outcomes (clockwise or counter-clockwise gratings), before degrading the predictive relationship in a test phase – such that ‘expected’ events followed actions on 50–75% of trials and ‘unexpected’ events ensued o...
A response to Corlett's response to our article "The perceptual prediction paradox"
Feedback is central to most forms of learning, and its reliability is therefore critical. Here, we i...
Past research in animals has suggested that attention is distributed to exploit known relationships ...
Forming expectations about what we are likely to perceive often facilitates perception. We forge su...
From the noisy information bombarding our senses, our brains must construct percepts that are veridi...
From the noisy information bombarding our senses our brains must construct percepts that are veridi...
Perceivers can use past experiences to make sense of ambiguous sensory signals. However, this may be...
We predict how our actions will influence the world around us. Prevailing models of action control p...
Perception of expected action outcomes has been thought for decades to be attenuated or ‘cancelled’....
We predict how our actions will influence the world around us. Prevailing models in the action contr...
Visual perception is strongly shaped by expectations, but it is poorly understood how such perceptua...
We build models of the world around us to guide perception and learning in the face of uncertainty. ...
Prior knowledge shapes what we perceive. A new brain stimulation study suggests that this perceptual...
Bayesian models of the mind suggest that we estimate the reliability or “precision” of incoming sens...
We thank Corlett for his thought-provoking response [1] to our recent article [2]. Corlett shares ou...
A response to Corlett's response to our article "The perceptual prediction paradox"
Feedback is central to most forms of learning, and its reliability is therefore critical. Here, we i...
Past research in animals has suggested that attention is distributed to exploit known relationships ...
Forming expectations about what we are likely to perceive often facilitates perception. We forge su...
From the noisy information bombarding our senses, our brains must construct percepts that are veridi...
From the noisy information bombarding our senses our brains must construct percepts that are veridi...
Perceivers can use past experiences to make sense of ambiguous sensory signals. However, this may be...
We predict how our actions will influence the world around us. Prevailing models of action control p...
Perception of expected action outcomes has been thought for decades to be attenuated or ‘cancelled’....
We predict how our actions will influence the world around us. Prevailing models in the action contr...
Visual perception is strongly shaped by expectations, but it is poorly understood how such perceptua...
We build models of the world around us to guide perception and learning in the face of uncertainty. ...
Prior knowledge shapes what we perceive. A new brain stimulation study suggests that this perceptual...
Bayesian models of the mind suggest that we estimate the reliability or “precision” of incoming sens...
We thank Corlett for his thought-provoking response [1] to our recent article [2]. Corlett shares ou...
A response to Corlett's response to our article "The perceptual prediction paradox"
Feedback is central to most forms of learning, and its reliability is therefore critical. Here, we i...
Past research in animals has suggested that attention is distributed to exploit known relationships ...