Perceptual organization of apparent motion in the Ternus display

被引:48
作者
He, ZJ [1 ]
Ooi, TL
机构
[1] Univ Louisville, Dept Psychol, Louisville, KY 40292 USA
[2] So Coll Optometry, Dept Biomed Sci, Memphis, TN 38104 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1068/p2941
中图分类号
R77 [眼科学];
学科分类号
100212 ;
摘要
A typical Ternus display has three sequentially presented frames, in which frame 1 consists of three motion tokens, frame 2 (blank) defines the interstimulus interval, and frame 3 has similar motion tokens with their relative positions shifted to the right. Interestingly what appears to be a seemingly simple arrangement of stimuli can induce one of two distinct apparent-motion percepts in the observer. The first is an element-motion perception where the left-end token is seen to jump over its two neighboring tokens (inner tokens) to the right end of the display. The second is a group-motion perception where the entire display of the three tokens is seen to move to the right. How does the visual system choose between these two apparent-motion perceptions? It is hypothesized that the choice of motion perception is determined in part by the perceptual organization of the motion tokens. Specifically, a group-motion perception is experienced when a strong grouping tendency exists among the motion tokens belonging to the same frame. Conversely, an element-motion perception is experienced when a strong grouping tendency exists between the inner motion tokens in frames 1 and 3 (ie the two tokens that overlap in space between frames). We tested this hypothesis by varying the perceptual organization of the motion tokens. Both spatial (form similarity, 3-D proximity, common surface/common region, and occlusion) and temporal (motion priming) factors of perceptual organization were tested. We found that the apparent-motion percept of the Ternus display can be predictably affected, in a manner consistent with the perceptual organization hypothesis.
引用
收藏
页码:877 / 892
页数:16
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