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Apparent Motion
background Background This phenomenon is highly dependent on the length of the flash (pause between the first and second stimuli) as well as the distance between the two stimuli. The farther the distance between the stimuli, the longer the flash must be to allow the appearance of motion, as if time must be allowed for the stimuli to travel from its original location to the next. If the pause before the second stimuli is too long or too short, the phenomenon dissappears. Not only that, but when more stimuli are added to the environment, complications occur in the percieved phenomenon of which stimuli translates into which other stimuli, especially if there are differences in color, shape, or a odd number of stimuli. Purpose of Our Software Double-click on each movie to play a short clip.
The movie on the left illusrates how two alternating displays can give the illusion of apparent motion as the eye seeks to make correspondences between two displays. The movie on the right illustrates how the model attempts to assign links between objects in the two displays. We turn ghosting on, which helps see correspondences in space. Here are some instructor resources for Apparent Motion. The basic goal of the unit is to allow students to discover the relationship between experimentation and model-based explanations for the observed phenomenon. In this case data collection is easy: students simply use their own perceptions as data collection. The built-in model makes clear connections between the student's reported phenomenology and the model's current prediction for what they should see.
Java AppletApplet. Doesn't allow loading or saving. Windows executable Introductory Movie
Introduces features of software and walks through an example experiment. Selected Publications on Apparent Motion
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