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The pupil responds spontaneously to perceived numerosity

Psychology

The pupil responds spontaneously to perceived numerosity

E. Castaldi, A. Pomè, et al.

This exciting study conducted by Elisa Castaldi, Antonella Pomè, Guido Marco Cicchini, David Burr, and Paola Binda explores how our perception of numerosity can influence the pupillary light response. Participants observed different patterns of black and white dots, revealing that the pupillary response adapts to perceived numerosity, highlighting a fascinating link between visual processing and physiological reactions.... show more
Abstract
Although luminance is the main determinant of pupil size, the amplitude of the pupillary light response is also modulated by stimulus appearance and attention. Here we ask whether perceived numerosity modulates the pupillary light response. Participants passively observed arrays of black or white dots of matched physical luminance but different physical or illusory numerosity. In half the patterns, pairs of dots were connected by lines to create dumbbell-like shapes, inducing an illusory underestimation of perceived numerosity; in the other half, connectors were either displaced or removed. Constriction to white arrays and dilation to black were stronger for patterns with higher perceived numerosity, either physical or illusory, with the strength of the pupillary light response scaling with the perceived numerosity of the arrays. Our results show that even without an explicit task, numerosity modulates a simple automatic reflex, suggesting that numerosity is a spontaneously encoded visual feature.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Oct 12, 2021
Authors
Elisa Castaldi, Antonella Pomè, Guido Marco Cicchini, David Burr, Paola Binda
Tags
perceived numerosity
pupillary light response
black dots
white dots
visual feature
physiological reaction
illusion
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