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Journal Article

Citation

Morgan M. Atten. Percept. Psychophys. 2017; 79(7): 1886-1891.

Affiliation

Division of Optometry, School of Health Sciences, City, University of London, Northampton Square, London, EC1V0HB, UK. michaelmorgan9331@gmail.com.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.3758/s13414-017-1380-z

PMID

28879457

Abstract

A spinning, moving object, such as a ball with a surface texture, combines motion signals from rotation and translation. The interaction between these two kinds of signal was studied psychophysically with moving, circular clouds of dots, which also could move within the cloud. If the cloud moved near-vertically downwards but the dots within it moved obliquely, the apparent path of the cloud was attracted to that of the dots, as previously demonstrated with moving Gabor patches (Tse & Hseih Vision Research, 46, 3881-3885, 2006; Lisi & Cavanagh Current Biology, 25, 2535-40, 2015). This attractive effect was enhanced in parafoveal viewing and by not presenting a frame around the dots. A larger effect in the opposite direction (repulsion) was found for the perceived direction of the dots when they moved near-vertically and the cloud containing them moved obliquely. These results are discussed in relation to Gestalt principles of perceived relative motion and, more recently, Bayes-inspired accounts of the interaction between local and global motion.


Language: en

Keywords

Double-drift; Fraser twisted cord; Global intergration; Motion perception

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