Attentional Capture from Looming Alters Perception

Vis cogn. 2021 Jan 17;29(2):118-124. doi: 10.1080/13506285.2021.1874583.

Abstract

Studies suggest looming motion represents a special class of attentional capture stimulus due to behavioral urgency: the need to act upon objects moving toward us in an environment. In particular, one theory suggests that faster reaction times to targets cued by looming relative to receding motion are driven by post-attentional, motor-priming processes beyond the attentional capture effects seen with other stimulus qualities such as color pop-out. The present study tested this theory using a relative size judgment task where targets were pre-cued by looming and receding optic flow fields. Results show systematic increases in the perceived size of targets that were cued by looming flow fields, consistent with previous attentional capture studies using onset cues. These results challenge theories attributing behavioral changes from looming motion to motor-priming alone.

Keywords: Attentional Capture; Behavioral Urgency; Looming Motion; Perceptual Distortion; Relative Size Judgments.