Perceptual Learning

How Experience Shapes Visual Perception

by Dosher, Lu

ISBN: 9780262363716 | Copyright 2020

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A comprehensive and integrated introduction to the phenomena and theories of perceptual learning, focusing on the visual domain.

Practice or training in perceptual tasks improves the quality of perceptual performance, often by a substantial amount. This improvement is called perceptual learning (in contrast to learning in the cognitive or motor domains), and it has become an active area of research of both theoretical and practical significance. This book offers a comprehensive introduction to the phenomena and theories of perceptual learning, focusing on the visual domain.
Perceptual Learning explores the tradeoff between the competing goals of system stability and system adaptability, signal and noise, retuning and reweighting, and top-down versus bottom-down processes. It examines and evaluates existing research and potential future directions, including evidence from behavior, physiology, and brain imaging, and existing perceptual learning applications, with a focus on important theories and computational models. It also compares visual learning to learning in other perceptual domains, and considers the application of visual training methods in the development of perceptual expertise and education as well as in remediation for limiting visual conditions. It provides an integrated treatment of the subject for students and researchers and for practitioners who want to incorporate perceptual learning into their practice.Practice or training in perceptual tasks improves the quality of perceptual performance, often by a substantial amount. This improvement is called perceptual learning, in contrast with learning in the cognitive or motor domains. Perceptual learning has been a very active area of research of both theoretical and practical interest. Research on perceptual learning is of theoretical significance in illuminating plasticity in adult perceptual systems, and in understanding the limitations of human information processing and how to improve them. It is of practical significance as a potential method for the development of perceptual expertise in the normal population, for its potential in advancing development and supporting healthy aging, and for noninvasive amelioration of deficits in challenged populations by training. Perceptual learning has become an increasingly important topic in biomedical research. Practitioners in this area include science disciplines such as psychology, neuroscience, computer sciences, and optometry, and developers in applied areas of learning game design, cognitive development and aging, and military and biomedical applications. Commercial development of training products, protocols, and games is a multi-billion dollar industry. Perceptual learning provides the basis for many of the developments in these areas.

This book is written for anyone who wants to understand the phenomena and theories of perceptual learning or to apply the technology of perceptual learning to the development of training methods and products. Our aim is to provide an introduction to those researchers and students just entering this exciting field, to provide a comprehensive and integrated treatment of the phenomena and the theories of perceptual learning for active perceptual learning researchers, and to describe and develop the basic techniques and principles for readers who want to successfully incorporate perceptual learning into applied developments. The book considers the special challenges of perceptual learning that balance the competing goals of system stability and system adaptability. It provides a systematic treatment of the major phenomena and models in perceptual learning, the determinants of successful learning and of specificity and transfer. The book provides a cohesive consideration of the broad range of perceptual learning through the theoretical framework of incremental learning of reweighting evidence that supports successful task performance. It provides a detailed analysis of the mechanisms by which perceptual learning improves perceptual limitations, the relationship of perceptual learning and the critical period of development, and the semi-supervised modes of learning that dominate perceptual learning. It considers limitations and constraints on learning multiple tasks and stimuli simultaneously, the implications of training at high or low levels of performance accuracy, and the importance of feedback to perceptual learning. The basis of perceptual learning in physiology is discussed along with the relationship of visual perceptual learning to learning in other sensory domains. The book considers the applications of perceptual learning in the development of expertise, in education and gaming, in training during development and aging, and applications to remediation of mental health and vision disorders. Finally, it applies the phenomena and models of perceptual learning to considerations of optimizing training.

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Contents (pg. vii)
Preface (pg. ix)
I. Overview (pg. 1)
1. Principles of Perceptual Learning (pg. 3)
1.1 The Importance of Experience and Learning in Perception (pg. 3)
1.2 Perceptual Learning in the Laboratory (pg. 5)
1.3 Plasticity versus Stability (pg. 9)
1.4 Improving the Signal-to-Noise Ratio in Human Performance (pg. 14)
1.5 Reweighting versus Representation Change (pg. 17)
1.6 The Importance of Generative Models and Optimizing Perceptual Learning (pg. 22)
1.7 Summary and Overview (pg. 24)
References (pg. 25)
II. Phenomenology (pg. 31)
2. Perceptual Learning in Visual Tasks (pg. 33)
2.1 Perceptual Expertise and Perceptual Plasticity (pg. 33)
2.2 Visual Perceptual Learning (pg. 34)
2.3 Learning through Representation Selection versus Creation (pg. 35)
2.4 Structure of a Typical Perceptual Learning Study (pg. 37)
2.5 Training Features and Task Types (pg. 40)
2.6 Perceptual Learning of Single Features (pg. 42)
2.7 Perceptual Learning of Patterns (pg. 52)
2.8 Perceptual Learning of Objects and Natural Stimuli (pg. 59)
2.9 Conclusions (pg. 63)
References (pg. 65)
3. Specificity and Transfer (pg. 73)
3.1 Specificity and Transfer in Perceptual Learning (pg. 73)
3.2 Example Paradigms for Assessing Specificity and Transfer (pg. 75)
3.3 Task Structure Analysis (pg. 78)
3.4 Behavioral Evidence (pg. 80)
3.5 Factors Affecting Specificity and Transfer (pg. 94)
3.6 Measurement Scale, Adaptive Estimation, and Decoupling Training and Transfer Assessment—Directions for Future Research (pg. 102)
3.7 Conclusions (pg. 103)
3.8 Appendix A: Experimental Paradigms, Methods of Analysis, and Indices of Specificity and Transfer (pg. 104)
3.9 Appendix B: Effects of Measurement Grain (pg. 113)
References (pg. 116)
III. Mechanisms (pg. 121)
4. Mechanisms (pg. 123)
4.1 A Signal-and-Noise Analysis of the Mechanisms of Perceptual Learning (pg. 123)
4.2 Signal Detection Theory (SDT) (pg. 124)
4.3 A Systems Analysis of Performance in the Observer (pg. 125)
4.4 Using External Noise to Study Perceptual Learning (pg. 131)
4.5 Mechanisms of Perceptual Learning in Visual Tasks (pg. 136)
4.6 Conclusions (pg. 145)
4.7 Appendix (pg. 146)
References (pg. 157)
5. Physiological Basis (pg. 163)
5.1 Biological Substrates of Perceptual Learning (pg. 163)
5.2 Physiological Substrates (pg. 165)
5.3 Using Biology to Understand Learning (pg. 174)
5.4 Evidence from Single-Cell Recording (pg. 177)
5.5 Evidence from Brain Imaging (pg. 194)
5.6 Discussion (pg. 203)
5.7 Conclusion (pg. 208)
References (pg. 208)
IV. Models of Perceptual Learning (pg. 215)
6. Models (pg. 217)
6.1 The Goals of Modeling (pg. 217)
6.2 Classical Models of Perceptual Learning (pg. 220)
6.3 The Reweighting Hypothesis and the AHRM Model (pg. 225)
6.4 Tests and Applications of the AHRM (pg. 229)
6.5 Other Reweighting Models of Learning (pg. 239)
6.6 Summary (pg. 242)
6.7 Future Directions (pg. 244)
6.8 Appendix: Implementation Details of the AHRM (pg. 246)
References (pg. 250)
7. Feedback (pg. 255)
7.1 Feedback in Perceptual Learning (pg. 255)
7.2 The Empirical Literature (pg. 257)
7.3 Learning Rules and Feedback (pg. 258)
7.4 Feedback and the AHRM (pg. 261)
7.5 Learning in Multistimulus Identification (pg. 272)
7.6 Conclusions (pg. 274)
7.7 Future Directions (pg. 275)
References (pg. 277)
8. Modeling Transfer and Specificity (pg. 281)
8.1 An Integrated Reweighting Theory (IRT) (pg. 281)
8.2 Everyday Analogies for Transfer (pg. 282)
8.3 Hierarchical Representations and Transfer (pg. 283)
8.4 Preliminary Hierarchical Models (pg. 285)
8.5 The AHRM as an IRT (pg. 287)
8.6 An IRT with Location-Invariant Representations (pg. 288)
8.7 Applications of the IRT (pg. 290)
8.8 Other Models (pg. 301)
8.9 Future Directions (pg. 306)
References (pg. 307)
9. Top-Down Influences of Task, Attention, and Reward (pg. 311)
9.1 Perceptual Learning and Selectivity (pg. 311)
9.2 Task-Relevant and Task-Irrelevant Learning (pg. 312)
9.3 Attention and Perceptual Learning (pg. 317)
9.4 Reward and other Interventions in Perceptual Learning (pg. 329)
9.5 Top-Down Influences, Reweighting, and Selection versus Creation (pg. 339)
9.6 Conclusions and Future Directions (pg. 340)
9.7 Appendix: Expanding Models of Perceptual Learning (pg. 341)
References (pg. 344)
V. Comparisons, Applications, and Optimization (pg. 353)
10. Forms of Plasticity and Other Modalities (pg. 355)
10.1 Learning and Plasticity (pg. 355)
10.2 Different Timescales of Plasticity (pg. 356)
10.3 Learning in other Sensory Modalities (pg. 364)
10.4 Category Learning (pg. 387)
10.5 Conclusions (pg. 392)
References (pg. 394)
11. Applications (pg. 403)
11.1 Perceptual Learning from the Laboratory to the World (pg. 403)
11.2 Perceptual Training and Expertise (pg. 404)
11.3 Perceptual Learning in Education (pg. 407)
11.4 Using Video Games to Train Visual Perception (pg. 410)
11.5 Training Limits in Visual Conditions (pg. 413)
11.6 Summary (pg. 432)
11.7 Translating Perceptual Learning (pg. 433)
11.8 Conclusions (pg. 438)
References (pg. 439)
12. Optimization (pg. 451)
12.1 Harnessing Visual Perceptual Learning (pg. 451)
12.2 An Optimization Framework (pg. 452)
12.3 Stages of Optimization (pg. 453)
12.4 Optimizing the Magnitude of Learning (pg. 458)
12.5 Optimizing Robustness, Generalization, and/or Transfer (pg. 465)
12.6 New Generative Models (pg. 471)
12.7 The Future of Theories (pg. 474)
References (pg. 475)
Index (pg. 483)
Color Plates (pg. Color Plate1)

Barbara Dosher

Barbara Dosher is Distinguished Professor of Cognitive Sciences at the University of California, Irvine. She is coauthor of Visual Psychophysics: From Laboratory to Theory (MIT Press).

Zhong-Lin Lu

Zhong-Lin Lu is Chief Scientist, Associate Provost for Sciences, Director of the NYU-ECNU Institute of Brain and Cognitive Science, Professor of Neural Science and Psychology at NYU Shanghai, as well as Professor of Neural Science and Psychology and Global Network Professor at NYU. He is coauthor of Visual Psychophysics: From Laboratory to Theory (MIT Press).

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