Spatiotemporal jump detection during continuous film viewing: Insights from a flicker paradigm

Atten Percept Psychophys. 2024 Feb;86(2):559-566. doi: 10.3758/s13414-023-02837-8. Epub 2024 Jan 3.

Abstract

We investigated how sensitive visual processing is to spatiotemporal disruptions in ongoing visual events. Prior work has demonstrated that participants often miss spatiotemporal disruptions in videos presented in the form of scene edits or disruptions during saccades. Here, we asked whether this phenomenon generalizes to spatiotemporal disruptions that are not tied to saccades. In two flicker paradigm experiments, participants were instructed to identify spatiotemporal disruptions created when videos either jumped forward or backward in time. Participants often missed the jumps, and forward jumps were reported less frequently compared with backward jumps, demonstrating that a flicker paradigm produces effects similar to a saccade contingent disruption paradigm. These results suggest that difficulty detecting spatiotemporal disruptions is a general phenomenon that extends beyond trans-saccadic events.

Keywords: Change blindness; Film comprehension; Flicker paradigm; Spatiotemporal disruptions; Visual cognition.

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Saccades*
  • Visual Perception*