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Ambiguity in Tactile Apparent Motion Perception.
Eintragsart
Autoren/Mitwirkende
- Liaci, Emanuela (Autor)
- Bach, Michael (Autor)
- Tebartz van Elst, Ludger (Autor)
- Heinrich, Sven P. (Autor)
- Kornmeier, Jürgen (Autor)
Titel
Ambiguity in Tactile Apparent Motion Perception.
Zusammenfassung
BACKGROUND: In von Schiller's Stroboscopic Alternative Motion (SAM) stimulus two visually presented diagonal dot pairs, located on the corners of an imaginary rectangle, alternate with each other and induce either horizontal, vertical or, rarely, rotational motion percepts. SAM motion perception can be described by a psychometric function of the dot aspect ratio ("AR", i.e. the relation between vertical and horizontal dot distances). Further, with equal horizontal and vertical dot distances (AR = 1) perception is biased towards vertical motion. In a series of five experiments, we presented tactile SAM versions and studied the role of AR and of different reference frames for the perception of tactile apparent motion. METHODS: We presented tactile SAM stimuli and varied the ARs, while participants reported the perceived motion directions. Pairs of vibration stimulators were attached to the participants' forearms and stimulator distances were varied within and between forearms. We compared straight and rotated forearm conditions with each other in order to disentangle the roles of exogenous and endogenous reference frames. RESULTS: Increasing the tactile SAM's AR biased perception towards vertical motion, but the effect was weak compared to the visual modality. We found no horizontal disambiguation, even for very small tactile ARs. A forearm rotation by 90° kept the vertical bias, even though it was now coupled with small ARs. A 45° rotation condition with crossed forearms, however, evoked a strong horizontal motion bias. DISCUSSION: Existing approaches to explain the visual SAM bias fail to explain the current tactile results. Particularly puzzling is the strong horizontal bias in the crossed-forearm conditions. In the case of tactile apparent motion, there seem to be no fixed priority rule for perceptual disambiguation. Rather the weighting of available evidence seems to depend on the degree of stimulus ambiguity, the current situation and on the perceptual strategy of the individual observer.
Publikation
PloS one
Band
11
Ausgabe
5
Seiten
e0152736
Datum
2016
Zeitschriften-Abkürzung
PLoS One
Sprache
eng
ISSN
1932-6203
Extra
Place: United States
PMID: 27171276
PMCID: PMC4865082
Zitierung
Liaci, E., Bach, M., Tebartz van Elst, L., Heinrich, S. P., & Kornmeier, J. (2016). Ambiguity in Tactile Apparent Motion Perception. PloS One, 11(5), e0152736. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0152736
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Thema
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