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Implied velocity and acceleration induce transformations of visual memory.

R A Finke, J J Freyd, G C Shyi

    Journal of Experimental Psychology. General
    |June 1, 1986
    PubMed
    Summary
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    Visual memory shifts forward with implied motion, similar to physical inertia. Increased speed and acceleration amplify this effect, while deceleration to a stop eliminates it, revealing properties of mental motion extrapolation.

    Area of Science:

    • Cognitive Psychology
    • Visual Perception
    • Motion Perception

    Background:

    • Representational momentum describes how visual memory shifts in the direction of implied motion.
    • Previous research suggests memory distortions are influenced by motion direction.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To investigate how implied motion velocity and acceleration affect visual memory distortions.
    • To determine if representational momentum is sensitive to changes in implied speed.

    Main Methods:

    • Participants viewed dot-pattern displays with implied constant velocity or acceleration.
    • Discrimination functions were used to measure recognition of the final pattern.
    • Implied motion varied in direction, velocity, and acceleration (or deceleration).

    Related Experiment Videos

    Main Results:

    • Memory distortions, or representational momentum, showed forward shifts corresponding to implied motion continuations.
    • Memory shifts increased with higher implied velocities and accelerations.
    • Deceleration to zero velocity eliminated the memory shift effect.

    Conclusions:

    • Mental extrapolation of motion shares inertial properties with physical motion.
    • Representational momentum is influenced by both the direction and the rate of implied motion.
    • The findings support theories linking visual memory to physical motion dynamics.