What Learning to See Arbitrary Motion Tells Us About Biological Motion Perception
What Learning to See Arbitrary Motion Tells Us About Biological Motion Perception is a scholarly work, published in 2005 in ''Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance''. The main subjects of the publication include motion field, Coherence, embodied cognition, perception, artificial intelligence, theory of mind, point, motion, motor control, computer science, structure from motion, biological motion, and computer vision. Results showed that observers (a) could learn to detect the presence of arbitrary motion, (b) could not learn to discriminate the coherence of arbitrary motion, although they could do so for upright biological motion, (c) could apply a detection strategy to learn to detect the presence of inverted biological motion nearly as well as they detected upright biological motion, and (d) performed better discriminating the coherence of upright biological motion compared with inverted biological motion.