Numerosity adaptation suppresses early visual responses

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Abstract

Humans and many animals rapidly and accurately perceive numerosity, the number of objects, in a visual image. The numerosity of recently viewed images influences our perception of the current image’s numerosity: numerosity adaptation. How does numerosity adaptation affect responses to numerosity in the brain? Recent studies show both early visual responses that monotonically increase with numerosity, and later numerosity-tuned responses that peak at different (preferred) numerosities in different neural populations. We have recently shown that numerosity adaptation affects the preferred numerosity of numerosity-tuned neural populations. We have also shown that early visual monotonic responses reflect image contrast, which follows numerosity closely. Here we ask how monotonic responses in the early visual cortex are affected by adaptation to different numerosities, using ultra-high field (7T) fMRI and neural model-based analyses. FMRI response amplitudes increased monotonically with numerosity throughout the early visual field maps (V1-V3, hV4, LO1-LO2 & V3A/B). This increase in response amplitudes becomes less steep after adaptation to higher numerosities, with this effect becoming stronger through the early visual hierarchy. This suppression of responses to numerosity is consistent with perceptual effects where adaptation to high numerosities reduces the perceived numerosity. These results imply that numerosity adaptation effects in later numerosity-tuned neural populations may originate in early visual areas that respond to image contrast in the adapting image.

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