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The interaction of perceived distance with the perceived direction of visual motion during movements of the eyes and the head
Authors:Michael T. Swanston  Nicholas J. Wade  Hiroshi Ono  Koichi Shibuta
Affiliation:1. Dundee Institute of Technology, Bell Street, DDl IHG, Dundee, Scotland
2. Dundee University, Dundee, Scotland
3. York University, Toronto, Canada
4. Kagoshima Women’s College, Kagoshima, Japan
Abstract:A horizontally moving target was followed by rotation of the eyes alone or by a lateral movement of the head. These movements resulted in the retinal displacement of a vertically moving target from its perceived path, the amplitude of which was determined by the phase and amplitude of the object motion and of the eye or head movements. In two experiments, we tested the prediction from our model of spatial motion (Swanston, Wade, & Day, 1987) that perceived distance interacts with compensation for head movements, but not with compensation-for eye movements with respect to a stationary head. In both experiments, when the vertically moving target was seen at a distance different from its physical distance, its perceived path was displaced relative to that seen when there was no error in pereived distance, or when it was pursued by eye movements alone. In a third experiment, simultaneous measurements of eye and head position during lateral head movements showed that errors in fixation were not sufficient to require modification of the retinal paths determined by the geometry of the observation conditions in Experiments 1 and 2.
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