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Bruggeman, Hugo; Piuneu, Vadzim S.; Rieser, John J.; Pick, Herbert L., Jr. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2009
When turning without vision or audition, people tend to perceive their locomotion as a change in heading relative to objects in the remembered surroundings. Such perception of self-rotation depends on sensitivity to information for movement from biomechanical activity of the locomotor system or from inertial activation of the vestibular and…
Descriptors: Individual Differences, Psychomotor Skills, Cognitive Processes, Biomechanics
Bastin, Julien; Calvin, Sarah; Montagne, Gilles – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
The authors proposed a model of the control of interceptive action over a ground plane (Chardenon, Montagne, Laurent, & Bootsma, 2004). This model is based on the cancellation of the rate of change of the angle between the current position of the target and the direction of displacement (i.e., the bearing angle). While several sources of visual…
Descriptors: Models, Human Body, Motion, Kinesthetic Perception

DiLorenzo, Joseph R.; Rock, Irvin – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1982
The underestimation (righting) of frame-of-reference tilt correlates with the perception of the vertical rod as tilted in the opposite direction (the rod-and-frame effect). The rod-and-frame effect can be thought of as the solution to the problem of the rod's tilt given the perceived tilt of the frame. (Author/PN)
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Higher Education, Kinesthetic Perception, Spatial Ability