A comparative analysis of perceptual noise in lateral and depth motion: Evidence from eye tracking.

IF 2.3 4区 心理学 Q2 OPHTHALMOLOGY Journal of Vision Pub Date : 2025-01-02 DOI:10.1167/jov.25.1.15
Joan López-Moliner
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Abstract

The characterization of how precisely we perceive visual speed has traditionally relied on psychophysical judgments in discrimination tasks. Such tasks are often considered laborious and susceptible to biases, particularly without the involvement of highly trained participants. Additionally, thresholds for motion-in-depth perception are frequently reported as higher compared to lateral motion, a discrepancy that contrasts with everyday visuomotor tasks. In this research, we rely on a smooth pursuit model, based on a Kalman filter, to quantify speed observational uncertainties. This model allows us to distinguish between additive and multiplicative noise across three conditions of motion dynamics within a virtual reality setting: random walk, linear motion, and nonlinear motion, incorporating both lateral and depth motion components. We aim to assess tracking performance and perceptual uncertainties for lateral versus motion-in-depth. In alignment with prior research, our results indicate diminished performance for depth motion in the random walk condition, characterized by unpredictable positioning. However, when velocity information is available and facilitates predictions of future positions, perceptual uncertainties become more consistent between lateral and in-depth motion. This consistency is particularly noticeable within ranges where retinal speeds overlap between these two dimensions. Significantly, additive noise emerges as the primary source of uncertainty, largely exceeding multiplicative noise. This predominance of additive noise is consistent with computational accounts of visual motion. Our study challenges earlier beliefs of marked differences in processing lateral versus in-depth motions, suggesting similar levels of perceptual uncertainty and underscoring the significant role of additive noise.

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横向和深度运动中感知噪声的比较分析:来自眼动追踪的证据。
我们如何准确地感知视觉速度的特征传统上依赖于歧视任务中的心理物理判断。这些任务通常被认为是费力的,容易受到偏见的影响,特别是在没有受过高度训练的参与者参与的情况下。此外,与横向运动相比,运动深度感知的阈值经常被报道为更高,这与日常视觉运动任务形成了对比。在本研究中,我们依靠基于卡尔曼滤波的平滑追踪模型来量化速度观测的不确定性。该模型使我们能够在虚拟现实设置的三种运动动态条件下区分加性和乘性噪声:随机游走、线性运动和非线性运动,并结合横向和深度运动组件。我们的目标是评估横向与运动深度的跟踪性能和感知不确定性。与先前的研究一致,我们的研究结果表明,随机行走条件下深度运动的性能下降,其特征是不可预测的定位。然而,当速度信息可用并有助于预测未来位置时,感知不确定性在横向和深度运动之间变得更加一致。这种一致性在视网膜速度在这两个维度之间重叠的范围内尤其明显。值得注意的是,加性噪声成为不确定性的主要来源,在很大程度上超过了乘性噪声。这种加性噪声的优势与视觉运动的计算计算是一致的。我们的研究挑战了先前关于在处理横向运动和深度运动方面存在显著差异的观点,表明感知不确定性的水平相似,并强调了附加噪声的重要作用。
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来源期刊
Journal of Vision
Journal of Vision 医学-眼科学
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
5.60%
发文量
218
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: Exploring all aspects of biological visual function, including spatial vision, perception, low vision, color vision and more, spanning the fields of neuroscience, psychology and psychophysics.
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