Atten Percept Psychophys
February 2024
We investigated how sensitive visual processing is to spatiotemporal disruptions in ongoing visual events. Prior work has demonstrated that participants often miss spatiotemporal disruptions in videos presented in the form of scene edits or disruptions during saccades. Here, we asked whether this phenomenon generalizes to spatiotemporal disruptions that are not tied to saccades.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrior research on film viewing has demonstrated that participants frequently fail to notice spatiotemporal disruptions, such as scene edits in the movies. Whether such insensitivity to spatiotemporal disruptions extends beyond scene edits in film viewing is not well understood. Across three experiments, we created spatiotemporal disruptions by presenting participants with minute long movie clips, and occasionally jumping the movie clips ahead or backward in time.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe investigated temporal properties of visual perception as a function of eccentricity, that is, spatial position relative to the fovea. Our experiments were motivated by well-characterized non-uniformities in neuron distribution in the human eye and early visual pathways. These non-uniformities have been extensively studied in the context of spatial perception, while largely neglected in relation to temporal perception.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn many settings "keep your eye on the ball" is good advice. People fixate important objects to obtain high quality information. Perhaps equally often, however, we engage with multiple important, moving, and unpredictable objects.
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