Perceptual integration of motion and form information: Evidence of parallel-continuous processing

Citation
A. Von Muhlenen et Hj. Muller, Perceptual integration of motion and form information: Evidence of parallel-continuous processing, PERC PSYCH, 62(3), 2000, pp. 517-531
Citations number
36
Categorie Soggetti
Psycology
Journal title
PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS
ISSN journal
00315117 → ACNP
Volume
62
Issue
3
Year of publication
2000
Pages
517 - 531
Database
ISI
SICI code
0031-5117(200004)62:3<517:PIOMAF>2.0.ZU;2-G
Abstract
In three visual search experiments, the processes involved in the efficient detection of motion-form conjunction targets were investigated. Experiment 1 was designed to estimate the relative contributions of stationary and mo ving nontargets to the search rate. Search rates were primarily determined by the number of moving nontargets; stationary nontargets sharing the targe t form also exerted a significant effect, but this was only about half as s trong as that of moving nontargets; stationary nontargets not sharing the t arget form had little influence. In Experiments 2 and 3, the effects of dis play factors influencing the visual (form) quality of moving items (movemen t speed and item size) were examined. Increasing the speed of the moving it ems (>1.5 degrees/sec) facilitated target detection when the task required segregation of the moving from the stationary items. When no segregation wa s necessary, increasing the movement speed impaired performance: With large display items, motion speed had little effect on target detection, but wit h small items, search efficiency declined when items moved faster than 1.5 degrees/sec. This pattern indicates that moving nontargets exert a strong e ffect on the search rate (Experiment 1) because of the loss of visual quali ty for moving items above a certain movement speed. A parallel-continuous p rocessing account of motion-form conjunction search is proposed, which comb ines aspects of Guided Search (Wolfe, 1994) and attentional engagement theo ry (Duncan & Humphreys, 1989).