File(s) not publicly available
Going, going, gone: Localizing abrupt offsets of moving objects
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-07, 18:40 authored by Gerrit W Maus, Romi NijhawanWhen a moving object abruptly disappears, this profoundly influences its localization by the visual system. In Experiment 1, 2 aligned objects moved across the screen, and 1 of them abruptly disappeared. Observers reported seeing the objects misaligned at the time of the offset, with the continuing object leading. Experiment 2 showed that the perceived forward displacement of the moving object depended on speed and that offsets were localized accurately. Two competing representations of position for moving objects are proposed: 1 based on a spatially extrapolated internal model, and the other based on transient signals elicited by sudden changes in the object trajectory that can correct the forward-shifted position. Experiment 3 measured forward displacements for moving objects that disappeared only for a short time or abruptly reduced contrast by various amounts. Manipulating the relative strength of the 2 position representations in this way resulted in intermediate positions being perceived, with weaker motion signals or stronger transients leading to less forward displacement. This 2-process mechanism is advantageous because it uses available information about object position to maximally reduce spatio-temporal localization errors. © 2009 American Psychological Association.
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and PerformanceISSN
0096-1523Publisher
American Psychological AssociationExternal DOI
Issue
3Volume
35Page range
611-626Pages
16.0Department affiliated with
- Psychology Publications
Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes