Effects of changes in size, speed, and distance on the perception of curved 3-D trajectories

Previous research on the perception of 3-D object motion has considered time to collision, time to passage, collision detection, and judgments of speed and direction of motion but has not directly studied the perception of the overall shape of the motion path. We examined the perception of the magni...

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Veröffentlicht in:Attention, perception & psychophysics perception & psychophysics, 2013-01, Vol.75 (1), p.68-82
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Junjun, Braunstein, Myron L., Andersen, George J.
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Andersen, George J.
description Previous research on the perception of 3-D object motion has considered time to collision, time to passage, collision detection, and judgments of speed and direction of motion but has not directly studied the perception of the overall shape of the motion path. We examined the perception of the magnitude of curvature and sign of curvature of the motion path for objects moving at eye level in a horizontal plane parallel to the line of sight. We considered two sources of information for the perception of motion trajectories: changes in angular size and changes in angular speed. Three experiments examined judgments of relative curvature for objects moving at different distances. At the closest distance studied, accuracy was high with size information alone but near chance with speed information alone. At the greatest distance, accuracy with size information alone decreased sharply, but accuracy for displays with both size and speed information remained high. We found similar results in two experiments with judgments of sign of curvature. Accuracy was higher for displays with both size and speed information than with size information alone, even when the speed information was based on parallel projections and was not informative about sign of curvature. For both magnitude of curvature and sign of curvature judgments, information indicating that the trajectory was curved increased accuracy, even when this information was not directly relevant to the required judgment.
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source MEDLINE; SpringerLink Journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Accuracy
Analysis of Variance
Behavioral Science and Psychology
Biological and medical sciences
Cognitive Psychology
Data Display
Depth Perception - physiology
Discrimination (Psychology) - physiology
Distance Perception - physiology
Experimental psychology
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Humans
Judgment
Motion
Motion Perception - physiology
Perception
Physics
Psychology
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Sensory perception
Vision
Vision, Ocular
title Effects of changes in size, speed, and distance on the perception of curved 3-D trajectories
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