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"The Perception and Discrimination of Speed in Complex Motion" |
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Colin W. G. Clifford*, Scott A. Beardsley & Lucia M. Vaina
Brain & Vision Research Laboratory
Department of Biomedical Engineering
Boston University
Boston MA 02215
USA
| *Current address for CC: | Psychology Department,
School of Behavioural Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia. |
Random dot kinematograms were used to simulate radial, rotational and
spiral optic flow. The stimuli were designed so that, while dot speed
increased linearly with distance from the centre of the display, the
density of dots remained uniform throughout their presentation.
In two experiments, subjects were required to perform a temporal 2AFC
speed discrimination task. Experiment 1 measured the perceived
speed of a range of optic flow patterns against a rotational comparison
stimulus. Radial motions were found to appear faster than
rotations by approximately 10%, with a smaller but significant effect
for spirals. Experiment 2 measured discrimination thresholds for
pairs of similar optic flow stimuli identical in all respects except
mean speed. No consistent differences were observed between the
speed discrimination thresholds of radial, rotational and spiral motions
and a control stimulus with the same speed profile in which motion was
along fixed random trajectories. The perceived speed results are
interpreted in terms of a model satisfying constraints on motion-in-depth
and object rigidity, while speed discrimination appears to be based upon
the pooled responses of elementary motion detectors.