Project Details
Insight: Neuroscientific investigations of knowledge effects on visual perception and awareness
Applicant
Professorin Dr. Rasha Abdel Rahman
Subject Area
General, Cognitive and Mathematical Psychology
Term
from 2012 to 2022
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 221029803
According to classic and current models visual perception can be viewed as encapsulated in the sense that it is not modulated by cognitive factors such as expectations or prior knowledge. Yet, evidence is cumulating that even verbally transmitted knowledge shapes perception, as has been demonstrated in the first phase of the current project. The perception of faces and objects can be modulated by knowledge, and this can have considerable conse-quences not only on how we perceive and evaluate our environment, but also on our behav-iour and social interactions. To date, not much is known about the precise mechanisms of knowledge effects on perception, and even less is known about influences of knowledge on visual awareness. The main goals of the second phase are therefore to determine the precise mechanisms that underlie knowledge effects on perception and to investigate the potential influences of knowledge on visual awareness. Part 1 investigates with event-related brain potentials (1) the influence of visually derived information (e.g., about emotional states, attrac-tiveness or personality impressions as trustworthiness) on effects of socially relevant person related information, (2) effects of gossip that is verbally marked as uncertain on face percep-tion and moral judgments, and (3) whether the observed effects of abstract, verbally transmit-ted information generalize to knowledge that is based on direct communicative experience. Part 2 investigates visual awareness and how it is modulated by (1) by socially relevant knowledge that is long established memory and potentially embedded in the visual represen-tations of faces, (2) by perceptual-semantic expertise, and (3) by the congruency of knowledge and the visual properties of faces and objects. The planned research should con-tribute to a better understanding of the basic mechanisms and limits of knowledge induced influences on visual perception and visual awareness.
DFG Programme
Research Grants