Perception of acceleration in motion-in-depth with only monocular and both monocular and binocular information

Publication date

2014-07-04T15:51:58Z

2014-07-04T15:51:58Z

2003

2014-07-04T15:51:58Z

Abstract

Observers are often required to adjust actions with objects that change their speed. However, no evidence for a direct sense of acceleration has been found so far. Instead, observers seem to detect changes in velocity within a temporal window when confronted with motion in the frontal plane (2D motion). Furthermore, recent studies suggest that motion-in-depth is detected by tracking changes of position in depth. Therefore, in order to sense acceleration in depth a kind of second-order computation would have to be carried out by the visual system. In two experiments, we show that observers misperceive acceleration of head-on approaches at least within the ranges we used [600-800 ms] resulting in an overestimation of arrival time. Regardless of the viewing condition (only monocular or monocular and binocular), the response pattern conformed to a constant velocity strategy. However, when binocular information was available, overestimation was highly reduced.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Universitat de València

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: http://www.uv.es/psicologica/articulos1.03/6-LOPEZMOLINER.pdf

Psicologica, 2003, vol. 24, p. 93-108

Recommended citation

This citation was generated automatically.

Rights

(c) López i Moliner, Joan et al., 2003