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Published January 2001 | public
Journal Article

Postcoincidence trajectory duration affects motion event perception

Abstract

In a two-dimensional display, identical visual targets moving toward and across each other with equal, constant speed can be perceived either to reverse their motion directions at the coincidence point (bouncing percept) or to stream through one another (streaming percept). Although there is a strong tendency to perceive the streaming percept, various factors have been reported to induce the bouncing percept, such as a sound or a visual flash at the moment of the visual target coincidence. By changing duration of the postcoincidence trajectory (PCT), we investigated how long it would take for such bounce-inducing factors to be maximally effective after the visual coincidence. With bounceinducing factors, the percentage of the bouncing percept did not reach its maximal level immediately after the coincidence but increased as a function of PCT duration up to 150–200 msec. The results clearly reject the possibility of the cognitive-bias hypothesis about the bounce-inducing effect and suggest rather that the bounce-inducing factors have to interact with the PCT for some period after the coincidence to be maximally effective.

Additional Information

© 2001 Psychonomic Society, Inc. Manuscript received March 11, 1999; revision accepted for publication March 24, 2000. This work was supported by the Sloan Foundation for Theoretical Neurobiology to K.W. The authors thank Sverker Runeson, Leo Poom, and anonymous reviewers for useful comments and suggestions for an earlier version of the manuscript and Johanna Weber for valuable comments and editing.

Additional details

Created:
August 21, 2023
Modified:
March 5, 2024