Contrast effects on speed perception for linear and radial motion

被引:15
作者
Champion, Rebecca A. [1 ]
Warren, Paul A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Manchester, Manchester Acad Hlth Sci Ctr, Fac Biol Med & Hlth, Div Neurosci & Expt Psychol,Sch Biol Sci, Manchester M13 9PL, Lancs, England
关键词
2D motion; Local motion; Global motion; Speed perception; Contrast; PERCEIVED SPEED; MOVEMENT; MODEL;
D O I
10.1016/j.visres.2017.07.013
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Speed perception is vital for safe activity in the environment. However, considerable evidence suggests that perceived speed changes as a function of stimulus contrast, with some investigators suggesting that this might have meaningful real-world consequences (e.g. driving in fog). In the present study we investigate whether the neural effects of contrast on speed perception occur at the level of local or global motion processing. To do this we examine both speed discrimination thresholds and contrast dependent speed perception for two global motion configurations that have matched local spatio-temporal structure. Specifically we compare linear and radial configurations, the latter of which arises very commonly due to self-movement. In experiment 1 the stimuli comprised circular grating patches. In experiment 2, to match stimuli even more closely, motion was presented in multiple local Gabor patches equidistant from central fixation. Each patch contained identical linear motion but the global configuration was either consistent with linear or radial motion. In both experiments 1 and 2, discrimination thresholds and contrast-induced speed biases were similar in linear and radial conditions. These results suggest that contrast-based speed effects occur only at the level of local motion processing, irrespective of global structure. This result is interpreted in the context of previous models of speed perception and evidence suggesting differences in perceived speed of locally matched linear and radial stimuli. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:66 / 72
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
[31]   Motion prediction at low contrast [J].
de'Sperati, Claudio ;
Thornton, Ian M. .
VISION RESEARCH, 2019, 154 :85-96
[32]   Accuracy and Tuning of Flow Parsing for Visual Perception of Object Motion During Self-Motion [J].
Niehorster, Diederick C. ;
Li, Li .
I-PERCEPTION, 2017, 8 (03) :1-18
[33]   Linear Summation of Repulsive and Attractive Serial Dependencies: Orientation and Motion Dependencies Sum in Motion Perception [J].
Alais, David ;
Leung, Johahn ;
Van der Burg, Erik .
JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2017, 37 (16) :4381-4390
[34]   Differential processing: Towards a unified model of direction and speed perception [J].
Farrell-Whelan, Max ;
Brooks, Kevin R. .
VISION RESEARCH, 2013, 92 :10-18
[35]   Insufficient compensation for self-motion during perception of object speed: The vestibular Aubert-Fleischl phenomenon [J].
Garzorz, Isabelle T. ;
Freeman, Tom C. A. ;
Ernst, Marc O. ;
MacNeilage, Paul R. .
JOURNAL OF VISION, 2018, 18 (13) :1-9
[36]   Disruptions to human speed perception induced by motion adaptation and transcranial magnetic stimulation [J].
Burton, M. P. ;
McKeefry, D. J. ;
Barrett, B. T. ;
Vakrou, C. ;
Morland, A. B. .
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2009, 30 (10) :1989-1998
[37]   Suprathreshold Motion Perception in Anisometropic Amblyopia: Interocular Speed Matching and the Pulfrich Effect [J].
Maehara, Goro ;
Araki, Syunsuke ;
Yoneda, Tsuyoshi ;
Thompson, Benjamin ;
Miki, Atsushi .
OPTOMETRY AND VISION SCIENCE, 2019, 96 (06) :434-442
[38]   Visual motion perception predicts driving hazard perception ability [J].
Lacherez, Philippe ;
Au, Sandra ;
Wood, Joanne M. .
ACTA OPHTHALMOLOGICA, 2014, 92 (01) :88-93
[39]   Cross-Modal Distortion of Time Perception: Demerging the Effects of Observed and Performed Motion [J].
Hass, Joachim ;
Blaschke, Stefan ;
Herrmann, J. Michael .
PLOS ONE, 2012, 7 (06)
[40]   Dynamic Dazzle Distorts Speed Perception [J].
Hall, Joanna R. ;
Cuthill, Innes C. ;
Baddeley, Roland ;
Attwood, Angela S. ;
Munafo, Marcus R. ;
Scott-Samuel, Nicholas E. .
PLOS ONE, 2016, 11 (05)