Monocular optical constraints on collision control.

M R Smith, J M Flach, S M Dittman, T Stanard
Author Information
  1. M R Smith: Department of Psychology, Wright State University, Dayton, Ohio 45435, USA.

Abstract

A simulated ball-hitting task was used to explore the optical basis for collision control. Ball speed and size were manipulated in Experiments 1 and 2. Results showed a tendency for participants to respond earlier to slower and larger balls. Early in practice, participants would consistently miss the slowest and largest balls. Experiments 3 and 4 examined performance as a function of the range of speeds. Performance for identical speeds differed depending on whether the speeds were fastest or slowest within a range. Asymmetric transfer between the 2 ranges of speeds showed that those trained with slow speeds were very successful when tested with a faster range of speeds. Those trained with fast speeds did not do as well when tested on slower speeds. The pattern of results across 4 experiments suggests that participants were using optical angle and expansion rate as separate degrees of freedom for solving the collision task.

MeSH Term

Analysis of Variance
Humans
Models, Psychological
Psychomotor Performance
Size Perception
Space Perception
Time Perception
Vision, Monocular

Word Cloud

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