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Heading and path information from retinal flow in naturalistic environments
Authors:James E. Cutting  Peter M. Vishton  Michelangelo Flückiger  Bernard Baumberger  John D. Gerndt
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, Cornell University, Uris Hall, 14853-7601, Ithaca, NY
2. Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts
3. Université de Genève, Geneva, Switzerland
Abstract:In four experiments, we explored the heading and path information available to observers as we simulated their locomotion through a cluttered environment while they fixated an object off to the side. Previously, we presented a theory about the information available and used in such situations. For such a theory to be valid, one must be sure of eye position, but we had been unable to monitor gaze systematically; in Experiment 1, we monitored eye position and found performance best when observers fixated the designated object at the center of the display. In Experiment 2, when we masked portions of the display, we found that performance generally matched the amount of display visible when scaled to retinal sensitivity. In Experiments 3 and 4, we then explored the metric of information about heading (nominal vs. absolute) available and found good nominal information but increasingly poor and biased absolute information as observers looked farther from the aimpoint. Part of the cause for this appears to be that some observers perceive that they have traversed a curved path even when taking a linear one. In all cases, we compared our results with those in the literature.
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