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A reevaluation of the effect of velocity on induced motion
Authors:Robert B. Post  Danielle Chi  Thomas Heckmann  Marc Chaderjian
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, University of California, 95616, Davis, CA
2. York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Abstract:Induced motion (IM) was measured as a function of the temporal frequency of inducer oscillation. IM magnitude decreased as frequency increased above 5 Hz. Increasing the amplitude of inducer motion, and thereby its velocity, did not influence the temporal frequency dependence of IM. This suggests that it is the duration of inducer motion, rather than its velocity, that is the critical stimulus feature in studies that report decreased IM with higher frequencies of inducer oscillation. In a separate experiment, the optokinetic nystagmus elicited by the inducing stimulus in the absence of a fixation target displayed frequency-response characteristics similar to those of IM. This finding supports the hypothesis that IM magnitude is proportional to the voluntary effort required to suppress reflexive eye movements while maintaining stable fixation.
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