Discrimination contours for the perception of head-centered velocity

Rebecca A. Champion, Tom C A Freeman

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    There is little direct psychophysical evidence that the visual system contains mechanisms tuned to head-centered velocity when observers make a smooth pursuit eye movement. Much of the evidence is implicit, relying on measurements of bias (e.g., matching and nulling). We therefore measured discrimination contours in a space dimensioned by pursuit target motion and relative motion between target and background. Within this space, lines of constant head-centered motion are parallel to the main negative diagonal, so judgments dominated by mechanisms that combine individual components should produce contours with a similar orientation. Conversely, contours oriented parallel to the cardinal axes of the space indicate judgments based on individual components. The results provided evidence for mechanisms tuned to head-centered velocityVdiscrimination ellipses were significantly oriented away from the cardinal axes, toward the main negative diagonal. However, ellipse orientation was considerably less steep than predicted by a pure combination of components. This suggests that observers used a mixture of two strategies across trials, one based on individual components and another based on their sum. We provide a model that simulates this type of behavior and is able to reproduce the ellipse orientations we found. © ARVO.
    Original languageEnglish
    Article number14
    JournalJournal of vision
    Volume10
    Issue number6
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2010

    Keywords

    • Detection/discrimination
    • Eye movements
    • Motionv-2D

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