AI Article Synopsis

  • A novel motion stimulus is perceived to last longer than a subsequent motion stimulus moving in the opposite direction due to differences in processing latency.
  • The first experiment showed that when the speed of the motion stimuli increased, the perceived duration expansion disappeared.
  • The second experiment found that faster speeds reduced reaction times for different onset types, but the extent of these reaction time changes did not completely explain the reduction in duration expansion, implying other factors may be at play.

Article Abstract

A novel motion stimulus is perceived to last longer than the subsequent motion stimulus moving in the opposite direction. A previous study suggested that the discrepancy in the processing latency for different onset types, as measured by reaction time, may play a role in this duration expansion. The present study examined whether the speed of motion stimuli influences this duration expansion. Experiment 1 demonstrated that the duration expansion ceased to occur when the stimulus speed increased. Experiment 2 showed that the increase in the speed reduced the reaction time for various onset types. However, the size of the changes in the reaction time did not match the reduction in the magnitude of the duration expansion observed in Experiment 1. These results suggest that the increase in speed eliminates the duration expansion of the novel motion stimulus, but the difference in the processing latency alone may not be the sole mechanism.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/03010066241237429DOI Listing

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