Journal article

Differential changes in human perception of speed due to motion adaptation

MA Hietanen, NA Crowder, MR Ibbotson

Journal of Vision | Published : 2008

Abstract

Visual systems adapt to the prevailing image conditions. This improves the ability to discriminate between two similar stimuli but has the side effect that veridical perception is degraded. For example, prolonged driving at 100 km/h may reduce the perceived speed to 80 km/h but improve the sensitivity to changes in the prevailing speed. Here we use radially expanding flow fields with a wide combination of adapt and test speeds to study human speed perception. Adaptation at speeds higher than the test always attenuates perceived speed, whereas adaptation at low and testing at high speeds increases perceived speed. We show that adaptation is stronger (i.e., post-adaptation speeds are perceived..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council


Awarded by Australian Research Council Centre for Excellence in Vision Science


Funding Acknowledgements

This work was supported by grants to MI from the National Health and Medical Research Council (224263) and the Australian Research Council Centre for Excellence in Vision Science (CE0561903) and to NC from the National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada.