Abstract
Would a motion-picture film of a rotating spiral induce a spiral aftereffect? This question was studied in two experiments in which Ss viewed an animated film of circles collapsing to a point. The rate of apparent motion of the collapsing circles and the discontinuity of motion-the length of jump between successively projected circles-were varied independently. A visual aftereffect like the spiral aftereffect was created. The aftereffect increased in strength and duration with the rate of motion, but at all rates of motion it declined as discontinuity of motion increased. The results are taken as evidence that motion aftereffects are caused by selective fatigue of small, directionally sensitive motion-receptive fields. © 1972 Psychonomic Society, Inc.
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CITATION STYLE
Banks, W. P., & Kane, D. A. (1972). Discontinuity of seen motion reduces the visual motion aftereffect. Perception & Psychophysics, 12(1), 69–72. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03212845
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