Jove
Visualize
Contact Us
JoVE
x logofacebook logolinkedin logoyoutube logo
ABOUT JoVE
OverviewLeadershipBlogJoVE Help Center
AUTHORS
Publishing ProcessEditorial BoardScope & PoliciesPeer ReviewFAQSubmit
LIBRARIANS
TestimonialsSubscriptionsAccessResourcesLibrary Advisory BoardFAQ
RESEARCH
JoVE JournalMethods CollectionsJoVE Encyclopedia of ExperimentsArchive
EDUCATION
JoVE CoreJoVE BusinessJoVE Science EducationJoVE Lab ManualFaculty Resource CenterFaculty Site
Terms & Conditions of Use
Privacy Policy
Policies

Related Concept Videos

Perceptual Constancy01:12

Perceptual Constancy

1.8K
Perceptual constancy is the ability to recognize that objects remain consistent and unchanged even when their appearance varies due to changes in sensory input. There are four main types of perceptual constancy: size constancy, shape constancy, color constancy, and brightness constancy.
Size constancy is the recognition that an object remains the same size, even when its image on the retina changes. For instance, a bus is perceived to be large enough to carry people, even if it looks tiny from...
1.8K
Gestalt Principles of Perception01:21

Gestalt Principles of Perception

1.9K
Gestalt principles provide a framework for understanding how humans perceive objects as unified wholes within their context. These principles are essential in explaining the cognitive processes that make sense of complex visual stimuli by organizing them into coherent groups. One fundamental principle is proximity, which posits that objects located close to each other are perceived as a collective group. For instance, when dots are positioned near one another, the visual system interprets them...
1.9K
Visual Agnosia01:12

Visual Agnosia

2.0K
Visual agnosia is a condition characterized by the inability to recognize visually presented objects despite having normal vision. For instance, a person with visual agnosia can describe the shape and color of an object but cannot identify or name it. This impairment does not affect their visual field, acuity, color vision, brightness discrimination, language, or memory. An example of this condition in a social setting is someone at a dinner party asking for "that silver thing with a round...
2.0K

You might also read

Related Articles

Articles linked to this work by shared authors, journal, and citation graph.

Sort by
Same author

Can I believe my voice? Self-similarity and the illusory truth effect.

Cognition·2026
Same author

Acute stress impairs visual narrative comprehension in younger but not older adults.

Scientific reports·2026
Same author

The grammar of the gallery: room corners influence the mental representation of picture arrangements.

Frontiers in psychology·2026
Same author

No error on the side of safety: No representational momentum for auditory looming stimuli.

Psychonomic bulletin & review·2026
Same author

Influence of solution efficiency and valence of instruction on additive and subtractive solution strategies in humans, GPT-4, and GPT-4o.

Communications psychology·2026
Same author

Not proportional after all: Investigating speed perception with the beep-speed illusion.

Attention, perception & psychophysics·2026
Same journal

Human thermal sensitivity drifts at extreme temperatures.

Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance·2026
Same journal

Dynamic competition between selective attention and spatial prediction during visual search.

Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance·2026
Same journal

Encapsulation of the visual perception of social events from semantic priming.

Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance·2026
Same journal

Biasmapping: Idiosyncratic covert search in the vicinity of fixation.

Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance·2026
Same journal

What are you still waiting for? Fricative recognition shows encapsulated processing and is partially predicted by secondary cue reliance.

Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance·2026
Same journal

Eye movements reveal that drivers can predict the location of hazards in dynamic road scenes but gaze and awareness are dissociable.

Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance·2026
See all related articles

Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 5, 2026

Simultaneous Eye Tracking and Single-Neuron Recordings in Human Epilepsy Patients
07:43

Simultaneous Eye Tracking and Single-Neuron Recordings in Human Epilepsy Patients

Published on: June 17, 2019

6.9K

Perceptual animacy: visual search for chasing objects among distractors.

Hauke S Meyerhoff1, Stephan Schwan1, Markus Huff2

  • 1Knowledge Media Research Center.

Journal of Experimental Psychology. Human Perception and Performance
|December 4, 2013
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Human observers detect chasing objects by focusing on individual object approach, not pairs. This visual search process relies on attention and spatial proximity cues for accurate chase perception.

More Related Videos

A Real-Time Interactive System for Studying Confrontational Pursuit Behavior in Rodents
06:25

A Real-Time Interactive System for Studying Confrontational Pursuit Behavior in Rodents

Published on: May 16, 2025

1.6K
Measuring Attentional Biases for Threat in Children and Adults
08:25

Measuring Attentional Biases for Threat in Children and Adults

Published on: October 19, 2014

17.3K

Related Experiment Videos

Last Updated: May 5, 2026

Simultaneous Eye Tracking and Single-Neuron Recordings in Human Epilepsy Patients
07:43

Simultaneous Eye Tracking and Single-Neuron Recordings in Human Epilepsy Patients

Published on: June 17, 2019

6.9K
A Real-Time Interactive System for Studying Confrontational Pursuit Behavior in Rodents
06:25

A Real-Time Interactive System for Studying Confrontational Pursuit Behavior in Rodents

Published on: May 16, 2025

1.6K
Measuring Attentional Biases for Threat in Children and Adults
08:25

Measuring Attentional Biases for Threat in Children and Adults

Published on: October 19, 2014

17.3K

Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Visual Perception
  • Human-Computer Interaction

Background:

  • Anthropomorphic interactions, like chasing, are key indicators of perceived animacy.
  • Previous research suggests chasing detection aligns with serial visual search principles.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate how humans detect chasing objects without distinct visual features.
  • To explore the role of attention, spatial proximity, and object relationships in chase perception.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized variants of a chasing detection paradigm.
  • Presented spatially separated and proximate objects to assess detection.
  • Analyzed detection latencies and search strategies.

Main Results:

  • Attention is required for object selection, even with separated stimuli.
  • Detecting a chase among non-chases is easier than the reverse.
  • Decreasing spatial distance between objects reduces detection time.
  • Chase detection is based on single object approach, not object pairs.

Conclusions:

  • Human chase detection relies on identifying a single object approaching others.
  • Spatial proximity and attentional focus are crucial factors in recognizing chasing behavior.
  • The perception of animacy through interaction is fundamentally linked to individual object dynamics.