Ceylan, GizayPascucci, David2023-10-232023-10-232023-10-232023-06-0110.1167/jov.23.6.8https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/201706WOS:001074432300001Visual decisions are attracted toward features of previous stimuli. This phenomenon, termed serial dependence, has been related to a mechanism that integrates present visual input with stimuli seen up to 10 to 15 s in the past. It is believed that this mechanism is "temporally tuned" and the effect of prior stimuli fades with time. Here, we investigated whether the temporal window of serial dependence is influenced by the number of stimuli shown. Observers performed an orientation adjustment task where the interval between the past and present stimulus and the number of intervening stimuli varied. First, we found that the direction-repulsive or attractive-and duration of the effect of a past stimulus depends on whether the past stimulus was relevant to behavior. Second, we show that the number of stimuli, and not only the passage of time, plays a role: The effect of a stimulus at a fixed interval depends on the number of other stimuli shown after. Our results demonstrate that neither a single mechanism nor a general tuning window can fully capture the complexity of serial dependence.Ophthalmologyserial dependencetask relevancenegative aftereffectssequential effectsopposite history biasesperceptionhistoryAttractive and repulsive serial dependence: The role of task relevance, the passage of time, and the number of stimulitext::journal::journal article::research article