Psychophysical experiments show that two different visual attributes, color and motion, processed in different areas of the visual brain, are perceived at different times relative to each other (Moutoussis and Zeki, 1997a). Here we demonstrate psychophysically that two variants of the same attribute, motion, which have the same temporal structure and are processed in the same visual areas, are also processed asynchronously. When subjects were asked to pair up-down motion of dots in one half of their hemifield with up-right motion in the other, they perceived the two directions of motion asynchronously, with the advantage in favor of up-right motion; when they were asked to pair the motion of white dots moving against a black background with that of red dots moving against an equiluminant green background, they perceived the luminant motion first, thus demonstrating a perceptual advantage of luminant over equiluminant motion. These results were not affected by motion speed or perceived motion "streaks." We thus interpret these results to reflect the different processing times produced by luminant and equiluminant motion stimuli or by different degrees of motion direction change, thus adding to the evidence that processing time within the visual system is a major determinant of perceptual time.


    Access

    Download


    Export, share and cite



    Title :

    Perceptual asynchrony for motion.


    Contributors:
    Lo, YT (author) / Zeki, S (author)

    Publication date :

    2014-03-04


    Remarks:

    Front Hum Neurosci , 8 , Article 108. (2014)


    Type of media :

    Article (Journal)


    Type of material :

    Electronic Resource


    Language :

    English



    Classification :

    DDC:    290 / 629



    The effects of simulator visual-motion asynchrony on simulator induced sickness

    MCCAULEY, MICHAEL / HETTINGER, LAWRENCE / SHARKEY, THOMAS et al. | AIAA | 1990




    Phase asynchrony between coronal index and sunspot numbers

    Deng, L.H. / Qu, Z.Q. / Wang, K.R. et al. | Elsevier | 2012