Journal article
Motion extrapolation in the flash-lag effect depends on perceived, rather than physical speed
J Yook, L Lee, S Vossel, R Weidner, H Hogendoorn
Vision Research | PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD | Published : 2022
Abstract
In the flash-lag effect (FLE), a flash in spatiotemporal alignment with a moving object is misperceived as lagging behind the moving object. One proposed explanation for this illusion is based on predictive motion extrapolation of trajectories. In this interpretation, the diverging effects of velocity on the perceived position of the moving object suggest that FLE might be based on the neural representation of perceived, rather than physical, velocity. By contrast, alternative explanations based on differential latency or temporal averaging would predict that the FLE does not rely on such a representation of perceived velocity. Here we examined whether the FLE is sensitive to illusory change..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This study was supported by an Australian Research Council (ARC) Discovery Projects Grant awarded to H.H. (DP180102268) .