TY - JOUR
T1 - Rhesus monkeys behave as if they perceive the Duncker illusion
AU - Zivotofsky, A. Z.
AU - Goldberg, M. E.
AU - Powell, K. D.
PY - 2005/7
Y1 - 2005/7
N2 - The visual system uses the pattern of motion on the retina to analyze the motion of objects in the world, and the motion of the observer him/herself. Distinguishing between retinal motion evoked by movement of the retina in space and retinal motion evoked by movement of objects in the environment is computationally difficult, and the human visual system frequently misinterprets the meaning of retinal motion. In this study, we demonstrate that the visual system of the Rhesus monkey also misinterprets retinal motion. We show that monkeys erroneously report the trajectories of pursuit targets or their own pursuit eye movements during an epoch of smooth pursuit across an orthogonally moving background. Furthermore, when they make saccades to the spatial location of stimuli that flashed early in an epoch of smooth pursuit or fixation, they make large errors that appear to take into account the erroneous smooth eye movement that they report in the first experiment, and not the eye movement that they actually make.
AB - The visual system uses the pattern of motion on the retina to analyze the motion of objects in the world, and the motion of the observer him/herself. Distinguishing between retinal motion evoked by movement of the retina in space and retinal motion evoked by movement of objects in the environment is computationally difficult, and the human visual system frequently misinterprets the meaning of retinal motion. In this study, we demonstrate that the visual system of the Rhesus monkey also misinterprets retinal motion. We show that monkeys erroneously report the trajectories of pursuit targets or their own pursuit eye movements during an epoch of smooth pursuit across an orthogonally moving background. Furthermore, when they make saccades to the spatial location of stimuli that flashed early in an epoch of smooth pursuit or fixation, they make large errors that appear to take into account the erroneous smooth eye movement that they report in the first experiment, and not the eye movement that they actually make.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=22944450074&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1162/0898929054475235
DO - 10.1162/0898929054475235
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C2 - 16102233
AN - SCOPUS:22944450074
SN - 0898-929X
VL - 17
SP - 1011
EP - 1017
JO - Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
JF - Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
IS - 7
ER -