The present study shows that the apparent direction of a moving pattern is systematically affected by its orientation. We found that the perceived direction of motion of a single Gabor grating changing position in discrete steps interleaved by blank inter-stimulus interval (ISI) is biased toward the orientation of the grating. This orientation-induced motion shift peaks for grating orientations ~±15 deg away from the physical motion trajectory and was profound for relatively short distances. Orientation adaptation revealed that the directional shift is determined by the apparent -not the physical -orientation of the grating, and a subsequent experiment demonstrated that directional shift is also influenced by the orientation of the contrast-defined stimulus envelope. Results provide further evidence that the apparent trajectory of a motion stimulus is determined by interactions between motion and pattern information at relatively high levels of visual processing.
CITATION STYLE
Nakayama, R., Harada, D., Kamachi, M. G., & Motoyoshi, I. (2018). Apparent shift in long-range motion trajectory by local pattern orientation. Scientific Reports, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-19005-2
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