Abstract

The constant rate of target displacement and the coherence of the track were varied in two factorial experiments. Both experiments involved pursuit tracking; the second also included compensatory tracking conditions. The results of both experiments showed significant increases in the criterion integrated absolute error scores with increases in rate and with decreases in coherence. The superiority of the pursuit mode increased with rate, but the mode × coherence interaction was not significant, indicating that both modes benefited about equally from input coherence. No significant losses in performance occurred after a one month retention interval. Results are compared with prior data from step-function tracking.

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