Ab. Sekuler, Collisions between moving visual targets: what controls alternative ways of seeing an ambiguous display?, PERCEPTION, 28(4), 1999, pp. 415-432
When identical visual targets move directly toward and then past one anothe
r, they appear either to stream past one another or to bounce off each othe
r. Bertenthal et al (1993 Perception 22 193-207) accounted for the relative
strengths of these two percepts by invoking a directional bias, arising fr
om cooperative interactions within a network of motion detectors. We tested
this explanation by devising conditions that would enhance or diminish the
strength of such a directional bias. In separate experiments we varied (i)
the presence or absence of temporal transients (pausing, disappearance, oc
clusion); (ii) the distances travelled by the targets; and (iii) their acce
leration or deceleration before and after collision. The tendency to see th
e objects stream past one another was not related to the strength of an hyp
othesized directional bias, suggesting that the perception of this ambiguou
s motion display was not mediated by directional recruitment. Instead, the
results suggest that perceived direction reflects the operation of neural c
onstraints that mirror the constraints operating upon moving objects in the
three-dimensional natural world.