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Orientation-dependency of perceptual surround suppression and orientation decoding of centre-surround stimuli are preserved with healthy ageing.

Authors :
Nguyen, Bao N.
Chan, Yu Man
Bode, Stefan
McKendrick, Allison M.
Source :
Vision Research. Nov2020, Vol. 176, p72-79. 8p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

A key visual neuronal property that is mirrored in human behaviour is centre-surround contrast suppression, which is orientation-dependent. When a target is embedded in a high-contrast surround, the centre appears reduced in contrast, the magnitude of which depends on the relative orientation between centre and surround. Previous reports demonstrate changes in perceptual surround suppression with ageing; however, whether the orientation-dependency of surround suppression is impacted by ageing has not been explored. Here, we tested 18 younger (aged 19-33) and 18 older (aged 60-77) adults. Perceptual surround suppression was stronger for parallel than orthogonal stimuli; however contrary to previous work, here we found no difference in perceptual suppression strength between age-groups. In the same participants, we measured event-related potentials (ERPs) and conducted multivariate pattern analysis to confirm that parallel and orthogonal centre-surround stimuli elicit distinguishable brain activity, predominantly over occipital areas. Despite a delay in the first prominent ERP component (P1) in response to each pattern, older adults showed similar decoding of orientation information (i.e. distinguish between parallel and orthogonal centre-surround stimuli from 70 ms post-stimulus onset) as younger adults. This suggests that sufficient information to distinguish orientation in centre-surround stimuli becomes available to the older human brain as early as in younger adults. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00426989
Volume :
176
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Vision Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
145530635
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.visres.2020.07.015