Probing the effect of the expected-speed violation illusion

被引:2
作者
Battaglini, Luca [1 ]
Mioni, Giovanna [1 ]
Casco, Clara [1 ]
Contemori, Giulio [1 ,2 ]
Konishi, Mahiko [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Padua, Dept Gen Psychol, Padua, Italy
[2] Univ Toulouse UPS, Ctr Rech Cerveau & Cognit, Toulouse, France
[3] PSL Univ, Dept Etud Cognit, Lab Sci Cognit & Psycholinguist, EHESS,CNRS,Ecole Normale Super, Paris, France
来源
PSYCHOLOGICAL RESEARCH-PSYCHOLOGISCHE FORSCHUNG | 2021年 / 85卷 / 07期
关键词
PERCEPTION; TIME; VELOCITIES;
D O I
10.1007/s00426-020-01426-w
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Motion perception is complex for the brain to process, involving interacting computations of distance, time, and speed. These computations can be biased by the context and the features of the perceived moving object, giving rise to several types of motion illusions. Recent research has shown that, in addition to object features and context, lifelong priors can bias attributes of perception. In the present work, we investigated if such long acquired expectations can bias speed perception. Using a two-interval forced-choice (2-IFC) task, we asked 160 participants in different experiments to judge which of two vehicles, one archetypically fast (e.g. a motorbike), and one comparatively slower (e.g. a bike), was faster. By varying the objective speeds of the two-vehicle types, and measuring the participants' point of subjective equality, we observed a consistent bias in participants' speed perception. Counterintuitively, in the first three experiments the speed of an archetypically slow vehicle had to be decreased relative to that of an archetypically fast vehicle, for the two to be judged as the same. Similarly, in the next three experiments, an archetypically fast vehicle's speed had to be increased relative to an archetypically slow vehicle's speed, for the two to be perceived as equal. Four additional control experiments replicated our results. We define this newly found bias as the expected-speed violation illusion (ESVI). We believe the ESVI as conceptually very similar to the size-weight illusion, and discuss it within the Bayesian framework of human perception.
引用
收藏
页码:2782 / 2791
页数:10
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