Static and dynamic factors in the perception of rotary motion

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Abstract

Direction of rotation and static slant judgments were collected for a series of outline plane forms in four experiments with 106 subjects. Direction was judged more accurately for forms displaying the same perspective gradients as trapezoids, but with right-angled contours, than for trapezoids. There were no consistent differences among these forms in judged slant. Direction of rotation judgments were affected by a static false interposition cue, with interposition increasing the proportion of veridical judgments when placed in conflict with a relative size gradient and decreasing this proportion when a size gradient was absent. Both a dynamic factor (contour angle change) and a static factor (misperceived relative distance of the vertical sides) were found to affect perceived direction of rotation, with direction judgments based primarily on the dynamic factor. © 1980 Psychonomic Society, Inc.

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APA

Braunstein, M. L., & Stern, K. R. (1980). Static and dynamic factors in the perception of rotary motion. Perception & Psychophysics, 27(4), 313–320. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03206120

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