Dynamic mechanisms of visually guided 3D motion tracking

Author:

Bonnen Kathryn123,Huk Alexander C.1423,Cormack Lawrence K.142

Affiliation:

1. Center for Perceptual Systems, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas;

2. Institute for Neuroscience, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas; and

3. Department of Neuroscience, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas

4. Department of Psychology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas;

Abstract

The continuous perception of motion-through-depth is critical for both navigation and interacting with objects in a dynamic three-dimensional (3D) world. Here we used 3D tracking to simultaneously assess the perception of motion in all directions, facilitating comparisons of responses to motion-through-depth to frontoparallel motion. Observers manually tracked a stereoscopic target as it moved in a 3D Brownian random walk. We found that continuous tracking of motion-through-depth was selectively impaired, showing different spatiotemporal properties compared with frontoparallel motion tracking. Two separate factors were found to contribute to this selective impairment. The first is the geometric constraint that motion-through-depth yields much smaller retinal projections than frontoparallel motion, given the same object speed in the 3D environment. The second factor is the sluggish nature of disparity processing, which is present even for frontoparallel motion tracking of a disparity-defined stimulus. Thus, despite the ecological importance of reacting to approaching objects, both the geometry of 3D vision and the nature of disparity processing result in considerable impairments for tracking motion-through-depth using binocular cues. NEW & NOTEWORTHY We characterize motion perception continuously in all directions using an ecologically relevant, manual target tracking paradigm we recently developed. This approach reveals a selective impairment to the perception of motion-through-depth. Geometric considerations demonstrate that this impairment is not consistent with previously observed spatial deficits (e.g., stereomotion suppression). However, results from an examination of disparity processing are consistent with the longer latencies observed in discrete, trial-based measurements of the perception of motion-through-depth.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Eye Institute (NEI)

National Science Foundation (NSF)

Harrington Fellowship

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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