Abstract
Recent studies have suggested that the visual system subtracts the optic flow pattern experienced during self-motion from the projected retinal motion of the environment to recover object motion, a phenomenon called “flow parsing”. In this experiment we tested whether the flow parsing process depends on heading perception, or only on the motion signals in optic flow. Two displays (83 × 83 deg, 500 ms) simulated an observer approaching a frontal plane that was composed of randomly placed dots or randomly placed dot pairs that formed a radial Glass pattern. The center of this radial Glass pattern was 10 deg away from the focus of expansion of the flow pattern. The radial Glass pattern allowed us to manipulate the perceived heading without affecting the motion input. For both displays, a probe dot moved upward on the frontal plane at 5 deg away from fixation. A horizontal component (along the world X-axis) under control of an adaptive staircase was added to the probe dot's vertical motion on the plane to det...
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