1 / 37

Motion Perception

Motion Perception. PSY 295 – Sensation & Perception Christopher DiMattina , PhD. Motion. Motion. Motion is change in an object’s position over time. Waterfall illusion. A circuit for detecting motion. Why might this not be a good motion-detector?.

Download Presentation

Motion Perception

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Motion Perception PSY 295 – Sensation & Perception Christopher DiMattina, PhD

  2. Motion PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  3. Motion • Motion is change in an object’s position over time PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  4. Waterfall illusion PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  5. A circuit for detecting motion • Why might this not be a good motion-detector? PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  6. Cannot tell a large bug from small moving bug PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  7. A better circuit • Include a rapidly adapting delayed inter-neuron and multiplicative neuron which must get simultaneous inputs PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  8. Can extend to many stages PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  9. Properties of our motion detector • Direction sensitive • Velocity tuned • Not responsive to large stationary objects PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  10. A feature, not a bug • Object does not actually need to move: Can disappear and then re-appear to the right at the appropriate time delay PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  11. Apparent motion • We experience apparent motion whenever we watch television, movies and cartoons PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  12. Flip-books • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DfaSIHjnxPQ&feature=related PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  13. Web activity • http://sites.sinauer.com/wolfe3e/chap8/mottypesF.htm PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  14. The correspondence problem • Which feature in frame 2 corresponds to feature in frame 1? PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  15. The aperture problem • Each V1 neuron only sees a small window of world • Local signal is consistent with multiple global motions PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  16. The aperture problem PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  17. Web activity • http://sites.sinauer.com/wolfe3e/chap8/mottypesF.htm PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  18. Neural Coding of Motion PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  19. Visual pathways • Magnocellular neurons in LGN sensitive to motion • Information goes to area V1 and then to an area specialized for motion processing called MT (middle temporal) PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  20. Direction selectivity in V1 • Hubel and Wiesel (1962) find direction selectivity in V1 PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  21. Global motion detector • MT neurons insensitive to form but sensitive to global motion • Integrate information from locally direction tuned V1 cells PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  22. MT and motion perception • Newsome and colleagues trained monkeys to detect arrays of coherently moving dots • Lesions of MT impair motion detection performance while leaving unaffected the ability to discriminate orientation PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  23. MT and motion perception • Stimulating a column of MT neurons with a given preferred direction actually biases the monkey’s perceptions towards that direction PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  24. MT and motion perception • http://cerco.ups-tlse.fr/~hupe/plaid_demo/demo_plaids.html • Cells in MT tuned to coherent pattern motion • Cells in V1 tuned to component motion PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  25. Motion aftereffects • http://sites.sinauer.com/wolfe3e/chap8/maeF.htm PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  26. Second-order motion • Can get motion percept in the absence of a clear figure • Random dots simply change their polarity PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  27. Second-order motion demo • http://sites.sinauer.com/wolfe3e/chap8/mottypesF.htm PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  28. Using Motion Information PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  29. Optic flow tells us about our motion • Expansion around point of focus • http://sites.sinauer.com/wolfe3e/chap8/mottypesF.htm PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  30. Biological motion • Can recognize actions using only motion cues • http://sites.sinauer.com/wolfe3e/chap8/mottypesF.htm PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  31. 3-D Structure from motion • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RdwU28bghbQ&feature=related PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  32. Demo in book • Fixate dot and move pencil across field • Next follow pencil (smooth pursuit) • Dot makes in (b) same trip across retina as pencil in (a). Why do we not perceive motion? PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  33. Eye movements • We make a wide variety of eye movements and many brain regions are dedicated to moving the eyes • Vergence - focus in depth • Saccades - ballistic eye movements for fixation • Smooth pursuit - tracking moving objects PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  34. Eyes move in their orbits PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  35. Many brain regions dedicated to eye movements PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  36. Saccades • Fixations on interesting parts of image • You cannot see your own saccades – try in mirror! • Saccadic suppression prevents world from smearing when you move your eyes PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  37. Why the dot does not move PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

More Related