Journal article
The coordinate systems used in visual tracking
PDL Howe, Y Pinto, TS Horowitz
Vision Research | Published : 2010
Abstract
Tracking moving objects is a fundamental attentional operation. Here we ask which coordinate system is used to track objects: retinal (retinotopic), scene-centered (allocentric), or both? Observers tracked three of six disks that were confined to move within an imaginary square. By moving either the imaginary square (and thus the disks contained within), the fixation cross, or both, we could dramatically increase the disks' speeds in one coordinate system while leaving them unchanged in the other, so as to impair tracking in only one coordinate system at a time. Hindering tracking in either coordinate system reduced tracking ability by an equal amount, suggesting that observers are compelled..
View full abstractGrants
Awarded by National Institutes of Health
Funding Acknowledgements
This research was funded by a Rubicon grant from NWO (Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research) to Yair Pinto, and NIH grant MH 65576 to Todd S. Horowitz.