4.1 Article

Heading perception from optic flow is affected by heading distribution

Journal

I-PERCEPTION
Volume 13, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/20416695221133406

Keywords

heading perception; optic flow; central tendency; heading distribution effect

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province [LY18C090007]

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Recent studies have found a central tendency in the perception of physical features, but this does not apply to heading perception. However, perceived headings are generally biased towards the left side.
Recent studies have revealed a central tendency in the perception of physical features. That is, the perceived feature was biased toward the mean of recently experienced features (i.e., previous feature distribution). However, no study explored whether the central tendency was in heading perception or not. In this study, we conducted three experiments to answer this question. The results showed that the perceived heading was not biased toward the mean of the previous heading distribution, suggesting that the central tendency was not in heading perception. However, the perceived headings were overall biased toward the left side, where headings rarely appeared in the right-heavied distribution (Experiment 3), suggesting that heading perception from optic flow was affected by previously seen headings. It indicated that the participants learned the heading distributions and used them to adjust their heading perception. Our study revealed that heading perception from optic flow was not purely perceptual and that postperceptual stages (e.g., attention and working memory) might be involved in the heading perception from optic flow.

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