The optic trajectory is not a lot of use if you want to catch the ball.

According to linear optic trajectory (LOT) theory, fielders use the direction of curvature of theoptic trajectory to control the way they run to intercept the ball. Data presented by D. M. Shaffer and M. K. McBeath (2002) as support for LOT theory show that the optic trajectory of balls that will fa...

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Main Authors: McLeod, P, Reed, N, Dienes, Z
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2002
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author McLeod, P
Reed, N
Dienes, Z
author_facet McLeod, P
Reed, N
Dienes, Z
author_sort McLeod, P
collection OXFORD
description According to linear optic trajectory (LOT) theory, fielders use the direction of curvature of theoptic trajectory to control the way they run to intercept the ball. Data presented by D. M. Shaffer and M. K. McBeath (2002) as support for LOT theory show that the optic trajectory of balls that will fall behind the fielder provide the cue that LOT theory predicts would send the fielder running forward, not backward. In this article, the authors show that watching these balls would provide the fielder with the cue that the optic acceleration cancellation (OAC) theory of interception predicts would send the fielder running backward. It appears that the fielders studied by Shaffer and McBeath were following the cue predicted by OAC theory, not that predicted by LOT theory.
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spelling oxford-uuid:8a04b05a-4f2e-423b-966f-b0eb57aef9562022-03-26T22:28:33ZThe optic trajectory is not a lot of use if you want to catch the ball.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:8a04b05a-4f2e-423b-966f-b0eb57aef956EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2002McLeod, PReed, NDienes, ZAccording to linear optic trajectory (LOT) theory, fielders use the direction of curvature of theoptic trajectory to control the way they run to intercept the ball. Data presented by D. M. Shaffer and M. K. McBeath (2002) as support for LOT theory show that the optic trajectory of balls that will fall behind the fielder provide the cue that LOT theory predicts would send the fielder running forward, not backward. In this article, the authors show that watching these balls would provide the fielder with the cue that the optic acceleration cancellation (OAC) theory of interception predicts would send the fielder running backward. It appears that the fielders studied by Shaffer and McBeath were following the cue predicted by OAC theory, not that predicted by LOT theory.
spellingShingle McLeod, P
Reed, N
Dienes, Z
The optic trajectory is not a lot of use if you want to catch the ball.
title The optic trajectory is not a lot of use if you want to catch the ball.
title_full The optic trajectory is not a lot of use if you want to catch the ball.
title_fullStr The optic trajectory is not a lot of use if you want to catch the ball.
title_full_unstemmed The optic trajectory is not a lot of use if you want to catch the ball.
title_short The optic trajectory is not a lot of use if you want to catch the ball.
title_sort optic trajectory is not a lot of use if you want to catch the ball
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