ILLUSION OF WEIGHT PERCEPTION CAUSED BY TEMPORAL MISMATCH

Hiroyuki Kambara Duk Shin Toshihiro Kawase Natsue Yoshimura, Yasuharu Koike
Abstract:
The perception of an object’s heaviness is not only dependent on its weight. It is well known that spatial information of an object, such as size, can easily deceive our perception of its heaviness. To further understand neural mechanism underlying weight perception, we investigated effects of temporal information on the weight perception. We conducted experiments in which a falling ball is displayed on a screen and load force of the ball is exerted on the hand by a haptic device. By shifting the timing of load force exertion away from visual contact timing (i.e., time when the ball hit the hand in the display), we found that the ball was perceived heavier/lighter when force was applied earlier/later than visual contact. We also found that the illusion in perceived heaviness induced by the time offset between visual and haptic contact timing became smaller after participants had been conditioned to the time offset. These results suggests that the illusion found in our experiments was not caused by the physical time offset between force exertion and visual contact but by the perceived time offset between them and/or estimation error in force exertion timing.
Keywords:
force illusion, weight perception, temporal perception, temporal adaptation
Download:
IMEKO-TC18-2013-011.pdf.pdf
DOI:
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Event details
IMEKO TC:
TC18
Event name:
TC18 Symposium 2013
Title:
5th Symposium on Measurement, Analysis and Modeling of Human Functions
Place:
Vancouver, CANADA
Time:
27 June 2013 - 29 June 2013