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The effect of temporal perception on weight perception. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Successful ball catching relies on accurately estimating the timing of when the ball will hit the hand, with previous experiments indicating that perceived weight is influenced by the timing of the load force application.
  • In this study, researchers found that balls were perceived as heavier when load force was applied before visual contact and lighter when applied after visual contact, indicating a clear link between timing and weight perception.
  • Additional experiments showed that participants' judgments about the timing of visual contact and force exertion shifted based on prior conditioning, suggesting that perceived heaviness is influenced by subjective time perception rather than actual time differences.

Article Abstract

A successful catch of a falling ball requires an accurate estimation of the timing for when the ball hits the hand. In a previous experiment in which participants performed ball-catching task in virtual reality environment, we accidentally found that the weight of a falling ball was perceived differently when the timing of ball load force to the hand was shifted from the timing expected from visual information. Although it is well known that spatial information of an object, such as size, can easily deceive our perception of its heaviness, the relationship between temporal information and perceived heaviness is still not clear. In this study, we investigated the effect of temporal factors on weight perception. We conducted ball-catching experiments in a virtual environment where the timing of load force exertion was shifted away from the visual contact timing (i.e., time when the ball hit the hand in the display). We found that the ball was perceived heavier when force was applied earlier than visual contact and lighter when force was applied after visual contact. We also conducted additional experiments in which participants were conditioned to one of two constant time offsets prior to testing weight perception. After performing ball-catching trials with 60 ms advanced or delayed load force exertion, participants' subjective judgment on the simultaneity of visual contact and force exertion changed, reflecting a shift in perception of time offset. In addition, timing of catching motion initiation relative to visual contact changed, reflecting a shift in estimation of force timing. We also found that participants began to perceive the ball as lighter after conditioning to 60 ms advanced offset and heavier after the 60 ms delayed offset. These results suggest that perceived heaviness depends not on the actual time offset between force exertion and visual contact but on the subjectively perceived time offset between them and/or estimation error in force timing.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3584255PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00040DOI Listing

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