Abstract
The effect of diverted selective attention on the induction of the cyclopean motion aftereffect (aftereffect induced from dynamic disparity information) was investigated. The luminance motion aftereffect was examined for comparison. During diverted-attention trials, observers ignored background adapting motion and performed a low-load or high-load rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) task presented in the center of the motion display. Baseline motion aftereffects were obtained with no diverted attention. The results showed that the cyclopean motion aftereffect, similar to the luminance motion aftereffect, declined only modestly under diverted-attention conditions. Selective attention appears to play a modest role in the visual processing of cyclopean motion.
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