Visual Control of Braking: A Test of the τ Hypothesis

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Abstract

Deceleration during braking could be controlled by (a) using the time derivative of the relative rate of optical expansion, relative to a -0.5 margin value of tau-dot (D.N. Lee, 1976) or (b) computing the required deceleration from spatial variables (i.e., perceived distance, velocity, or object size). Participants viewed closed-loop displays of approach to an object and regulated their deceleration with a brake. The object appeared on a checkerboard ground surface (providing velocity, distance, and size information) or with no background (providing only optical expansion). Mean tau-dot during braking was -0.51, and estimates of the critical value of tau-dot based on brake adjustments were -0.44 and -0.52, close to the expected value. There were no overall effects of the ground surface or object size. The results are consistent with a tau-dot strategy, where the direction and magnitude of brake adjustments are regulated using tau-dot. © 1995 American Psychological Association.

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Yilmaz, E. H., & Warren, W. H. (1995). Visual Control of Braking: A Test of the τ Hypothesis. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 21(5), 996–1014. https://doi.org/10.1037/0096-1523.21.5.996

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