Position Constancy during Pursuit Eye Movement: An Investigation of the Filehne Illusion

Experiments were performed to investigate the Filehne illusion, the apparent movement of the background during pursuit eye movements. In a dark room subjects tracked a luminous target as it moved at 3°/s or 10.5/s in front of an illuminated background which was either stationary or moved at a fraction of the target speed in the same or opposite direction. Subjects reported whether the background appeared to move and the direction of the movement. Results reveal only a partial loss of position constancy for the background during tracking. The stationary background is perceived to move slightly in the direction opposite to that in which the tracked target is moving. These results seemed best described as an instance of perceptual underconstancy and led to the speculation that the source of the illusion is an underestimation of the rate of pursuit eye movements. An experimental test of this hypothesis which produced supporting evidence is reported.

[1]  G. A. Ferguson,et al.  Statistical analysis in psychology and education , 1960 .

[2]  Ernst von Fleischl,et al.  Physiologisch-optische Notizen , 1882 .

[3]  Quinn McNemar,et al.  Statistical Analysis in Psychology and Education. , 1967 .

[4]  J. Kravitz,et al.  The measurement of the constancy of visual direction and of its adaptation , 1965 .

[5]  R. Brubaker Models for the perception of speech and visual form: Weiant Wathen-Dunn, ed.: Cambridge, Mass., The M.I.T. Press, I–X, 470 pages , 1968 .

[6]  E. Holst Relations between the central Nervous System and the peripheral organs , 1954 .

[7]  K. Duncker,et al.  Über induzierte Bewegung , 1929 .

[8]  London,et al.  Form and Space Vision , 1972 .

[9]  J J Gibson,et al.  What gives rise to the perception of motion? , 1968, Psychological review.

[10]  A. Mack An investigation of the relationship between eye and retinal image movement in the perception of movement , 1970 .

[11]  C. Rashbass,et al.  The relationship between saccadic and smooth tracking eye movements , 1961, The Journal of physiology.

[12]  J C Hay,et al.  Visual Adaptation to an Altered Correlation between Eye Movement and Head Movement , 1968, Science.

[13]  G. Westheimer Eye movement responses to a horizontally moving visual stimulus. , 1954, A.M.A. archives of ophthalmology.

[14]  I. Rock,et al.  Stroboscopic movement based on change of phenomenal rather than retinal location. , 1962, The American journal of psychology.

[15]  J. F. Brown The visual perception of velocity , 1931 .