Judgments of synchrony between auditory and moving or still visual stimuli

被引:6
作者
Fouriezos, George [1 ]
Capstick, Gary [1 ]
Monette, Francois [1 ]
Bellemare, Christine [1 ]
Parkinson, Matthew [1 ]
Durnoulin, Angela [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Ottawa, Sch Psychol, Ottawa, ON K1N 6N5, Canada
来源
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-REVUE CANADIENNE DE PSYCHOLOGIE EXPERIMENTALE | 2007年 / 61卷 / 04期
关键词
TEMPORAL-ORDER JUDGMENTS; REACTION-TIME; PERCEPTION; OBJECTS; ONSET; DISSOCIATIONS; LATENCIES; OFFSET; LAG;
D O I
10.1037/cjep2007028
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
The flash-lag effect is a Visual illusion wherein intermittently flashed, stationary stimuli seem to trail after a moving visual stimulus despite being flashed synchronously. We tested hypotheses that the flash-lag effect is due to spatial extrapolation, shortened perceptual lags, or accelerated acquisition of moving stimuli, all of which call for an earlier awareness of moving visual stimuli over stationary ones. Participants judged synchrony of a click either to a stationary flash of light or to a series of adjacent flashes that seemingly bounced off or bumped into the edge of the visual display. To be judged synchronous with a stationary flash, audio clicks had to be presented earlier - not later than clicks that went with events, like a simulated bounce (Experiment 1) or crash (Experiments 2-4), of a moving visual target. Click synchrony to the initial appearance of a moving stimulus was no different than to a flash, but clicks had to be delayed by 30-40 ins to seem synchronous with the final (crash) positions (Experiment 2). The temporal difference was constant over a wide range of motion velocity (Experiment 3). Interrupting the apparent motion by omitting two illumination positions before the last one did not alter subjective synchrony, nor did their occlusion, so the shift in subjective synchrony seems not to be due to brightness contrast (Experiment 4). Click synchrony to the offset of a long duration stationary illumination was also delayed relative to its onset (Experiment 5). Visual Stimuli in motion enter awareness no sooner than do stationary flashes, so motion extrapolation, latency difference, and motion acceleration cannot explain the flash-lag effect.
引用
收藏
页码:277 / 292
页数:16
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