Tracking the changing feature of a moving object

<p>The mind can track not only the changing locations of moving objects, but also changing features, which are often meaningful for guiding action. In the real dynamic world, features are often changing even as the objects they belong to move. How does the mind track such features? I found tha...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: De Freitas, J
Format: Thesis
Published: 2015
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author De Freitas, J
author2 De Freitas, J
author_facet De Freitas, J
De Freitas, J
author_sort De Freitas, J
collection OXFORD
description <p>The mind can track not only the changing locations of moving objects, but also changing features, which are often meaningful for guiding action. In the real dynamic world, features are often changing even as the objects they belong to move. How does the mind track such features? I found that this ability is enabled by a highly feature- specific process that <em>continuously</em> tracks the feature — even during occlusion, when the feature is completely invisible. This suggests that the mental representation of a changing feature and its moving object are continuously transformed. I also found a systematic error in performance, whereby the feature was reliably perceived to be further ahead than it truly was. This effect appears to occur because during occlusion the mental representation of the feature is transformed at a quicker rate than the veridical rate, perhaps in order to conservatively anticipate future feature states. Finally, I found an age-related decline in this feature tracking ability, and discuss ongoing work with lesion patients into the neural substrates of this process.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:efb8b12a-3820-4ca2-8631-e676437b22962022-03-27T11:42:18ZTracking the changing feature of a moving objectThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_bdccuuid:efb8b12a-3820-4ca2-8631-e676437b2296ORA Deposit2015De Freitas, JDe Freitas, JNobre, AHumphreys, G<p>The mind can track not only the changing locations of moving objects, but also changing features, which are often meaningful for guiding action. In the real dynamic world, features are often changing even as the objects they belong to move. How does the mind track such features? I found that this ability is enabled by a highly feature- specific process that <em>continuously</em> tracks the feature — even during occlusion, when the feature is completely invisible. This suggests that the mental representation of a changing feature and its moving object are continuously transformed. I also found a systematic error in performance, whereby the feature was reliably perceived to be further ahead than it truly was. This effect appears to occur because during occlusion the mental representation of the feature is transformed at a quicker rate than the veridical rate, perhaps in order to conservatively anticipate future feature states. Finally, I found an age-related decline in this feature tracking ability, and discuss ongoing work with lesion patients into the neural substrates of this process.</p>
spellingShingle De Freitas, J
Tracking the changing feature of a moving object
title Tracking the changing feature of a moving object
title_full Tracking the changing feature of a moving object
title_fullStr Tracking the changing feature of a moving object
title_full_unstemmed Tracking the changing feature of a moving object
title_short Tracking the changing feature of a moving object
title_sort tracking the changing feature of a moving object
work_keys_str_mv AT defreitasj trackingthechangingfeatureofamovingobject