Perceiving direction of deformation-based motion

In dynamic visual scenes, many materials—including cloth, jelly-like bodies, and flowing liquids—undergo non-rigid deformations that convey information about their physical state. Among such cues, we focus on deformation-based motion—defined as the spatial shifts of image deformation. Studying defor...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Takahiro Kawabe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2025-07-01
Series:i-Perception
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/20416695251364725
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849223169229979648
author Takahiro Kawabe
author_facet Takahiro Kawabe
author_sort Takahiro Kawabe
collection DOAJ
description In dynamic visual scenes, many materials—including cloth, jelly-like bodies, and flowing liquids—undergo non-rigid deformations that convey information about their physical state. Among such cues, we focus on deformation-based motion—defined as the spatial shifts of image deformation. Studying deformation-based motion is essential because it lies at the intersection of motion perception and material perception. This study examines how two fundamental properties—spatial frequency and displacement speed—jointly shape the perception of deformation-based motion. We focused on these parameters because, in luminance-based motion perception, spatial frequency and displacement speed have been shown to critically influence motion sensitivity. Across three experiments using sequentially deformed 1/f noise images as a neutral background, we systematically manipulated the spatial frequency components of the deformation and the speed at which these deformations were displaced. Results showed that direction discrimination performance was strongly modulated by the interaction between spatial frequency and displacement speed. Suppressing local deformation cues improved discrimination at low frequencies, suggesting that local signals may interfere with global motion inference. These findings reveal how the spatial structure and dynamics of image deformation constrain motion perception and provide insights into how the brain interprets dynamic visual information from non-rigid materials.
format Article
id doaj-art-932534878aa84ecb9afcda58032fa86d
institution Kabale University
issn 2041-6695
language English
publishDate 2025-07-01
publisher SAGE Publishing
record_format Article
series i-Perception
spelling doaj-art-932534878aa84ecb9afcda58032fa86d2025-08-25T21:03:37ZengSAGE Publishingi-Perception2041-66952025-07-011610.1177/20416695251364725Perceiving direction of deformation-based motionTakahiro KawabeIn dynamic visual scenes, many materials—including cloth, jelly-like bodies, and flowing liquids—undergo non-rigid deformations that convey information about their physical state. Among such cues, we focus on deformation-based motion—defined as the spatial shifts of image deformation. Studying deformation-based motion is essential because it lies at the intersection of motion perception and material perception. This study examines how two fundamental properties—spatial frequency and displacement speed—jointly shape the perception of deformation-based motion. We focused on these parameters because, in luminance-based motion perception, spatial frequency and displacement speed have been shown to critically influence motion sensitivity. Across three experiments using sequentially deformed 1/f noise images as a neutral background, we systematically manipulated the spatial frequency components of the deformation and the speed at which these deformations were displaced. Results showed that direction discrimination performance was strongly modulated by the interaction between spatial frequency and displacement speed. Suppressing local deformation cues improved discrimination at low frequencies, suggesting that local signals may interfere with global motion inference. These findings reveal how the spatial structure and dynamics of image deformation constrain motion perception and provide insights into how the brain interprets dynamic visual information from non-rigid materials.https://doi.org/10.1177/20416695251364725
spellingShingle Takahiro Kawabe
Perceiving direction of deformation-based motion
i-Perception
title Perceiving direction of deformation-based motion
title_full Perceiving direction of deformation-based motion
title_fullStr Perceiving direction of deformation-based motion
title_full_unstemmed Perceiving direction of deformation-based motion
title_short Perceiving direction of deformation-based motion
title_sort perceiving direction of deformation based motion
url https://doi.org/10.1177/20416695251364725
work_keys_str_mv AT takahirokawabe perceivingdirectionofdeformationbasedmotion