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Influence of crowd behaviour on estimates of biological motion speed

conference contribution
posted on 2024-02-09, 18:08 authored by Ian Thornton, Quoc Vuong, George Mather
<p>Does the behaviour of to-be-ignored “crowds” influence the perception of target walker speed? Baseline trials presented two point-light walkers that moved at different speeds. The task was to report whether the red or green walker was faster. On experimental trials, the task was the same, but targets were surrounded by 5 red and 5 green figures that made two task-irrelevant crowds. On speed-congruent trials, the faster target had a colour-consistent crowd that moved at an even faster pace. On speed-incongruent trials, the colour-consistent crowd moved at a slower pace. There were three possible outcomes 1) Crowd speed-congruency could have no influence; 2) Averaging of target and crowd speed might lead to faster responses on speed-congruent trials; 3) Within-colour contrast between target and crowd might lead to faster responses on speed-incongruent trials. Initial results support the third outcome, suggesting that task-irrelevant crowd speed is processed, but not averaged.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Psychology (Research Outputs)

Publisher

Sage

ISSN

3010066

Date Submitted

2018-10-19

Date Accepted

2018-01-01

Date of First Publication

2018-01-01

Date of Final Publication

2018-01-01

Event Name

European conference on Visual Perception

Event Dates

26-30 August 2018

ePrints ID

33419

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