On 2017 Apr 05, Lydia Maniatis commented:
You say that what you mean by “reduced ability to resolve figure-ground competition…is an open question.” But the language is clear, and regardless of whether concave or convex regions are seen as figure, the image is still being resolved into figure and ground. In other words, your experiments in no sense provide evidence that older people are not resolving images into figure and ground, only that convexity may not be as dispositive a factor as in younger people. Perhaps they are influenced more by the location of the red dot, as I believe that it is more likely that fixated regions will be seen as figure, all other things being equal.
In your response you specify that ‘failure to resolve’ may be interpreted in the sense of “decreased stability of the dominant percept and increased flipping.” However, in your discussion, you note, that, on the contrary, other researchers have found increased stability of the initial percept and difficulty in reversing ambiguous stimuli in older adults. If your inhibition explanation is consistent with BOTH increased flipping and greater stability, then it’s clearly too flexible to be testable. And, again, increased flipping rate is not really the same thing as “inability to resolve.”
The second alternative you propose is that stimuli are “not perceived to have figure ground character, perhaps being perceived as flat patterns.” This is obviously also in conflict with the other studies cited above. If the areas are perceived as adjacent rather than as having a figure-ground relationship, this also involves perceptual organization. For normal viewers, such a percept – e.g. simultaneously seeing both faces and vase in the Rubin vase, is very difficult, so it hard to imagine it occurring in older viewers, but who knows. If such an idea is testable, then you should test it.
You say the logic of your hypothesis is sound and your interpretations parsimonious, but in fact it isn’t clear what your hypothesis is, (what failure to resolve means). If your results are replicable, you may have demonstrated that, under the conditions of your experiment, convex region is less dispositive a factor in older adults. But in no sense have you properly formed or tested any explanatory hypotheses as to why this occurred.
In addition, I don’t think its fair to say that you’ve excluded the possible effect of the brevity of the stimulus. 250ms is still pretty short, considering that saccades typically take about 200ms to initiate. We know that older people generally respond more slowly at any task. The fact that practical considerations make it hard to work with longer exposure times doesn’t make this less of a problem.
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