Topic 8: Motion Perception Flashcards

1
Q

Akinetopsia

A

a condition in which damage to an area of the cortex involved in motion perception causes blindness to motion

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2
Q

Event

A

a segment of time at a particular location that is perceived by observers to have a beginning and an ending

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3
Q

Event Boundary

A

the point in time when one events ends and another begins

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4
Q

Point-Light Walkers

A

a biological motion stimulus created by placing lights at a number of places on a person’s body and having an observer view of the moving-light stimulus that results as the person moves in the dark

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5
Q

Real Motion

A

the physical movement of a stimulus

contrasts with apparent motion

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6
Q

Illusory Motion

A

perception of motion when there actually is none

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7
Q

Induced Motion

A

the illusory movement of one object that is caused by the movement of another object that is nearby

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8
Q

Motion Aftereffects

A

an illusion that occurs after a person views a moving stimulus and then sees movement in the opposite direction when viewing a stationary stimulus immediately afterward

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9
Q

Waterfall Illusion

A

an aftereffect of movement that occurs after viewing a stimulus moving in one direction, such as a waterfall

viewing the waterfall makes other objects appear to move in the opposite direction

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10
Q

Optic Array

A

the structured pattern of light created by the presence of objects, surfaces, and textures in the environment

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11
Q

Local Disturbance In The Optic Array

A

occurs when one object moves relative to the environment, so that the stationary background is covered and uncovered by the moving object

this local disturbance indicates that the object is moving relative to the environment

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12
Q

Global Optic Flow

A

information for movement that occurs when all elements in a scene move

the perception of global optic flow indicates that it is the observer that is moving and not the scene

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13
Q

Reichardt Detector

A

a neural circuit proposed by Werner Reichardt, in which signals caused by movement of a stimulus across the receptors are possessed by a delay unit and an output unit so that signals are generated by movement in one direction but not in the opposite direction

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14
Q

Output Unit

A

a component of the Reichardt detector that compares signal received from two or more neurons

according to Reichardt’s model, activity in the output unit is necessary for motion perception

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15
Q

Delay Unit

A

a component of the Reichardt detector proposed to explain how neural firing occurs to different detectors of movement

the delay unit delays teh transmission of nerve impulses as they travel from the receptors toward the brain

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16
Q

Middle Temporal (MT) Area

A

brain region in the temporal lobe that contains many directionally selective neurons

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17
Q

Coherence

A

in research on movement perception in which arrays of moving dots are used as stimuli, the degree of correlation between the direction of the moving dots

zero percent coherence means all of the dots are moving independently

100 percent coherence means all of the dots are moving in the same direction

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18
Q

Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS)

A

presenting a strong magnetic field to the head that temporarily disrupts the functioning of a specific area of the brain

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19
Q

Microstimulation

A

a procedure in which a small electrode is inserted into the cortex and an electrical current passed through the electrode activates neurons near the tip of the electrode

this procedure has been used to determine how activating specific groups of neurons affects perception

20
Q

Aperture Problem

A

occurs when only a portion of a moving stimulus can be seen, as when the stimulus can be seen, as when the stimulus is viewed through a narrow aperture or through the “field of view” of a neurons’ receptive field

this can result in misleading information about the direction in which the stimulus is moving

21
Q

Shortest Path Constraint

A

in the perception of apparent motion, the principle that apparent movement tends to occur along the shortest path between two stimuli

22
Q

Biological Motion

A

motion produced by biological organisms

most of the experiments on biological motion have used walking humans with lights attached to their joints and limbs as stimuli

23
Q

Implied Motion

A

when a still picture depicts an action that involves motion, so that an observer could potentially extend the action depicted in the picture in his or her mind based on what will most likely happen next

24
Q

Representational Momentum

A

occurs when motion depicted in a still picture continues in an observer’s mind

25
Q

What information is provided to us by motion?

A
  1. attracts attention
  2. provides information about the object’s three-dimensional shape
  3. provides information that helps us segregate figure from ground
  4. provides information that enables us to interact with the environment
26
Q

What was the Ramachandran & Gregory (1978) study on how the magno handles motion?

A

used isoluminant stimuli: contains lines and forms which differ from the background only on the basis of hue

there are lightness differences

stimuli were moved against the background

difficult to perceive motion

conclusion: magno handles motion; parvo not responsible

27
Q

What is the Reichardt motion-detector circuit?

A

receptors A-F are pointed at different locations in space

cells G, I, K inhibit neighbors when motion is to the right

cells H, J, L pass on activity when motion is to the left

cell M signals leftward motion (does not signal motion to the right b/c of lateral inhibition)

28
Q

What are the problems with the Reichardt motion detector circuit?

A

following a moving object with your eyes (pursuit): object is perceived as moving, even though retinal position doesn’t change

sweeping you eyes across a stationary scene (saccade), it appears to remain motionless

29
Q

What is the solution to the problems of the Reichardt motion detector circuit?

A

take motion of eyes into account

30
Q

What are the components of corollary discharge theory?

A

image displacement signal (IDS): detects motion across retina

motor signal (MS): muscle-movement info sent to eye muscles

corollary discharge signal (CDS): copy of motor signal

comparator: determines perception of motion; occurs when IDS present or CDS present (but not both)

31
Q

What is motion perception with CDS?

A
  1. observing afterimage in a dark room (retinal image stationary, eyes moving)
  2. pushing on eyeball but keeping eyes stationary (muscles push back, causing CDS)
  3. pursuit: moving object, eyes move with it (e.g., tracking a car driving past: no IDS)
  4. eyes paralyzed, try to move your eyes (retinal image stationary, but CDS sent)
32
Q

What is the interstimulus interval (ISI)?

A

apparent motion perception depends on timing

important variable is the ISI: time between offset of frame 1 and onset of frame 2

< 30 ms: simultaneously
60 ms: continuous movement
>200 ms: succession (mind won’t stitch together)

33
Q

What does the perception of apparent motion depend upon?

A

distance between stimuli

frame duration

stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA)

SOA law: changes in ISI and frame duration do not affect motion perception unless there is also a change in SOA

34
Q

What is the motion correspondence problem?

A

which elements in frame 1 correspond with which elements in frame 2

for N elements, there are N! possible interpretations

35
Q

What is the solution to the motion correspondence problem?

A

nearest-neighbor principle: select alternative that minimizes overall “traveling distance” of elements

match is made on intensity; not necessarily shape

in absence of intensity differences, texture is used

36
Q

What is the Wagon Wheel illusion?

A

occurs when a rotating spoked wheel is perceived as rotating backwards; often seen in films or on TV

due to a discrepancy between the speed of rotation and the rate of filming

with small angular displacement (i.e., slow rotation speed), a spoke in one frame is correctly marched to the nearest neighbor (itself) in the next frame

however, at higher speeds there is greater angular displacement, and the nearest neighbor in the next frame may cause misinterpretation of rotation direction

interestingly, this effect may obtain in continuous light (not strobscopically, as on film)

this may be due to adaption of certain motion-sensitive neurons as in motion aftereffects

37
Q

What is a “point-light walker”?

A

attached 12 light bulbs to joints of a co-worker

filmed “point light walker” in a dark room

result is clearly identifiable as a person, even after only 200 ms

38
Q

What can a “point-light walker” be used for?

A

to identify dancing couples

to recognize one’s own walk (or that of friends)

to determine sex, within 4.4 seconds of viewing (males have greater shoulder than hip movement; vice-versa for women)

by cats (to detect other cats)

even when display is “masked” by randomly moving dots (albeit with decreased accuracy)

39
Q

How could the recognition of “point-light walkers” be due to evolution?

A

biological predisposition to recognize humans and animals

is preferred by infants by 4 months of age (but usually develops between 6-9 months)

associated with increased activity in superior temporal sulcus

40
Q

What is the uncanny valley?

A

as robots appear more humanlike, their shinwakan (affinity) increases until a valley is reached, in which subtle imperfections create a strangeness

motion creates a more intense reaction than a still entity

implication: robots should not be made into humanlike androids, but should be stylized to avoid entering the uncanny valley

has been applied to “creepy” computer graphics characters in movies and videogames

41
Q

What are the pros of the uncanny valley?

A

may provide a framework for making robots/CGI characters more humanlike

may contribute to an understanding of social interaction

42
Q

What are the cons of the uncanny valley?

A

shinwakan may be a confounding of strange/familiar and eerie/nor eerie

criticized as pseudoscientific

evidence equivocal

43
Q

What are the two requirements for motion pictures to be perceived correctly?

A

on-screen image must be flicker-free

slightly different frames must be shown in succession

44
Q

Why does an on-screen image have to be flicker-free for a motion picture to be perceived?

A

minimum 10 frames per second (fps) –> flickering movement

critical flicker fusion: frequency at which a succession of stimuli appear to be on continuously; ~50 fps

light projected through the shutter, which has rotating blades

blade covers the period of pulldown; film the stops momentarily

blade covers the period of pulldown; film then stops momentarily

film projectors show 24 fps with 2 blades –> 48 fps

45
Q

Why must slightly different frames be shown in succession for a motion picture to be perceived?

A

motion perception not governed by “persistence of vision”, which implies a positive afterimage that would cause frames to “bleed” together

persistence would lead to a smearing of successive images, and not necessarily to motion

“fine-grained” apparent motion over small distances (as in motion pictures) may activate the short-range motion system, and be treated as real motion

46
Q

What two motion detection systems were proposed by Braddick (1974)?

A

short-range: low-level; occurs within small visual angles (15-20’); governs real motion of stimuli

long-range: higher-level; occurs in larger visual angles (20’-6 degrees); mechanism for apparent motion