Abstract

Expectations about forthcoming visual motion shaped by observers' experiences are known to induce anticipatory smooth eye movements (ASEMs) and changes in visual perception. Previous studies have demonstrated discrete effects of expectations on the control of ASEM and perception. However, the tasks designed in those studies were not able to segregate the effects of expectations and execution of ASEM itself on perception. In the present study, we attempted to directly examine the effect of ASEM itself on visual speed perception with a two-alternative forced-choice (2AFC) task, in which observers were asked to track a pair of sequentially presented visual motion stimuli with their eyes and to judge whether the second stimulus (test stimulus) was faster or slower than the first (reference stimulus). Our results showed that observers' visual speed perception, quantified by a psychometric function, shifted according to ASEM velocity. This was the case even though there was no difference in the steady-state eye velocity. Further analyses revealed that the observers' perceptual decisions could be explained by a difference in the magnitude of retinal slip velocity in the initial phase of ocular tracking when the reference and test stimuli were presented, rather than in the steady-state phase. Our results provide psychophysical evidence of the importance of initial ocular tracking in visual speed perception and the strong impact of ASEM.NEW & NOTEWORTHY We provide psychophysical evidence that the execution of anticipatory smooth eye movement (ASEM) leads to underestimation of visual speed perception, that is, observers perceive the object motion velocity as slower than when ASEM is not induced, even though the performance of subsequent ocular tracking is comparable. Moreover, our results showed that such perceptual decisions regarding object motion velocity were derived from the ASEM-induced decrease in retinal slip velocity during the initial phase of ocular tracking.

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