15 results match your criteria: "1760 University Drive[Affiliation]"
Atten Percept Psychophys
July 2022
Department of Art, The Ohio State University Mansfield, Mansfield, OH, USA.
In this paper we propose an anti-inertial motion (AIM) bias that can explain several intuitive physics beliefs including the straight-down belief and beliefs held concerning the pendulum problem. We show how the AIM bias also explains two new beliefs that we explore - a straight-up-and-down belief as well as a straight-out/backward bias that occurs for objects traveling in one plane that are then thrown in another plane, ostensibly affording a greater opportunity for perception of canonical motion. We then show how the AIM bias in general is invariant across perceived/imagined speed of the object carrier, only altering percentages of straight-out from backward responses, and why occluding the carrier once the object is released into a second plane does not result in more veridical perception.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAtten Percept Psychophys
February 2019
Department of Psychology, The Ohio State University - Mansfield, 1760 University Drive, Mansfield, OH, 44906, USA.
Previous work has shown that people overestimate their own body tilt by a factor of about 1.5, the same factor by which people overestimate geographical and man-made slopes. In Experiment 1 we investigated whether people can accurately identify their own and others' tipping points (TPs) - the point at which they are tilted backward and would no longer be able to return to upright - as well as their own and others' center of mass (COM) - the relative position of which is used to determine actual TP.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAtten Percept Psychophys
November 2018
Department of Psychology, Ohio State University-Mansfield, 1760 University Drive, Mansfield, OH, 44906, USA.
In the present work we investigated people's perceptions of orientation for surfaces that are conceived of as being sloped downward from vertical against a vertical reference frame. In the three conditions of Experiment 1, participants either (1) placed a ladder against a wall at what they thought was the most stable position, and then estimated its orientation; (2) gave a verbal (conceptual) estimate of what the most stable position of a ladder leaned against a wall would be; or (3) drew a line representing the most stable position of a ladder to be placed against a wall, and then gave a verbal estimate of the ladder's orientation. Ladder placement was shallower than the most stable position, as were the verbal estimations of both the positioned and drawn orientations and the verbal (conceptual) estimates of the most stable position for a ladder to be leaned against a wall, relative to the actual orientations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Monit Assess
November 2017
Chemical Engineering Department, College of Engineering, Qatar University, P.O. Box: 2713, Doha, Qatar.
Prosperity in Qatar and the consequent stresses on water resources resulted in a sustainable increase in the bottled drinking water market. Reports on health concerns and possible migration of chemicals from the plastic material into the water have driven the current investigation. This study aims to address the extent of antimony (Sb) leaching from polyethylene terephthalate (PET) water bottles subject to temperature variations (24-50 °C) due to Qatar's hot climate and improper storage conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAtten Percept Psychophys
February 2017
Department of Psychology, The Ohio State University-Mansfield, 1760 University Drive, Mansfield, OH, 44906, USA.
We investigate the relationship between verbal and hand proprioception of slant. In Experiment 1 we demonstrate that verbally estimating free hand orientation produces overestimates by a factor of 1.67.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMagn Reson Chem
May 2017
College of Chemistry, Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, Soochow University, Suzhou, 215123, China.
A new pulse sequence for obtaining F detected DOSY (diffusion ordered spectroscopy) spectra of fluorinated molecules is presented and used to study fluoropolymers based on vinylidene fluoride and chlorotrifluoroethylene. The performance of F DOSY NMR experiments (and in general any type of NMR experiment) on fluoropolymers creates some unique complications that very often prevent detection of important signals. Factors that create these complications include: (1) the presence of many scalar couplings among H, F and C; (2) the large magnitudes of many F homonuclear couplings (especially J ); (3) the large F chemical shift range; and (4) the low solubility of these materials (which requires that experiments be performed at high temperatures).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAtten Percept Psychophys
February 2016
Department of Psychology, Ohio State University-Mansfield, 1760 University Drive, Mansfield, OH, USA.
People verbally overestimate the orientation of slanted surfaces, but accurately estimate or underestimate slanted surfaces using a palm board. We demonstrate a fundamental issue that explains why the two different values typically given for palm board and verbal/visual matching estimates express similar perceptual representations of slanted surfaces. The fundamental problem in studies measuring palm board and verbal estimates is that the "measure"-either (1) reproducing a verbally given angle or the orientation of a slanted surface with an unseen hand or (2) verbally or visually estimating a visually perceived surface-has always been confounded with the "surface"-either using (1) a palm board or (2) a hill or ramp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAtten Percept Psychophys
February 2016
Department of Psychology, The Ohio State University, Mansfield, 1760 University Drive, Mansfield, OH, 44906, USA.
In the current work we investigate people's perception of their own body tilt in the pitch direction. In Experiment 1, we tilted people backward at 1 of 5 different randomly assigned angles using an inversion table. People significantly overestimated the angle at which they were tilted backward at angles from 8° to 45°.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychon Bull Rev
December 2015
Department of Psychology, Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, PA, USA.
People verbally overestimate hill slant by ~15°-25°, whereas manual estimates (e.g., palm board measures) are thought to be more accurate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAtten Percept Psychophys
April 2015
Department of Psychology, Ohio State University, 1760 University Drive, Mansfield, Ohio, 44906, USA,
Previous work has shown that overestimates of geographic slant depend on the modality used (verbal or haptic). Recently, that line of reasoning has come into question for many reasons, not the least of which is that the typical method used for measuring "action" has been the use of a palm board, which is not well calibrated to any type of action toward slanted surfaces. In the present work, we investigated how a remote haptic task that has been well calibrated to action in previous work is related to verbal overestimates of slanted surfaces that are out of reach.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAtten Percept Psychophys
October 2013
Department of Psychology, Ohio State University Mansfield, 1760 University Drive, Mansfield, OH, 44906, USA,
Three theories of the informational basis for object interception strategies were tested in an experiment where participants pursued toy helicopters. Helicopters were used as targets because their unpredictable trajectories have different effects on the optical variables that have been proposed as the basis of object interception, providing a basis for determining the variables that best explain this behavior. Participants pursued helicopters while the positions of both pursuer and helicopter were continuously monitored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIperception
June 2013
Department of Psychology, Ohio State University, 1760 University Drive, Mansfield, OH 44906, USA; e-mail:
There is a current debate concerning whether people's physiological or behavioral potential alters their perception of slanted surfaces. One way to directly test this is to physiologically change people's potential by lowering their blood sugar and comparing their estimates of slant to those with normal blood sugar. In the first investigation of this (Schnall, Zadra, & Proffitt, 2010), it was shown that people with low blood sugar gave higher estimates of slanted surfaces than people with normal blood sugar.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPers Soc Psychol Bull
July 2013
The Ohio State University at Mansfield, 1760 University Drive, Mansfield, OH 44906, USA.
The authors propose the Model of Self-Determined Sexual Motivation to examine sexual motivation in dating relationships using a Self-Determination Theory (SDT) framework. This model predicted that sexual need satisfaction would mediate the association between self-determined sexual motives and the outcome variables of psychological well-being and relational quality. Three studies tested this model.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychon Bull Rev
October 2013
Department of Psychology, The Ohio State University--Mansfield, 1760 University Drive, Mansfield, OH, 44906, USA,
Previous work investigating the strategies that observers use to intercept moving targets has shown that observers maintain a constant target-heading angle (CTHA) to achieve interception. Most of this work has concluded or indirectly assumed that vision is necessary to do this. We investigated whether blindfolded pursuers chasing a ball carrier holding a beeping football would utilize the same strategy that sighted observers use to chase a ball carrier.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPerception
September 2011
Department of Psychology, Ohio State University at Mansfield, 1760 University Drive, Mansfield, OH 44906, USA.
We investigated the ability of quarterbacks in American football to intercept a moving receiver with a football in occluded and normal viewing conditions, and whether they can accurately predict their own success. Quarterbacks were successful in almost 80% of the trials in the occlusion condition, statistically as successful as in the normal viewing condition. Quarterbacks' predictions of their own success accounted for little variance in actual success.
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