Abstract

A relatively frequent error when reporting brief visual displays is to combine presented features incorrectly. It has been proposed that Gestalt grouping constrains such errors so that miscombined features tend to come from the same perceptual group. In three experiments it was examined whether this principle applies to grouping by motion, and to grouping by proximity. Miscombinations of colour and form were more likely to consist of a colour and form that had moved in the same direction than features which had moved in opposite directions. Miscombinations were also more likely for adjacent items. The implications of these results for the mechanisms of feature integration are discussed.

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