The Twinkle-Goes illusion is an apparent perceptual extrapolation of moving objects that suddenly disappear. Object disappearance must occur against a white noise background that is dynamically updating, or against an initially static white noise background that becomes dynamic within a brief time window after disappearance. Here, we have refined the critical time window for dynamic noise onset to just ∼ 20 ms after moving object disappearance. We have also successfully measured the illusion using a sensory reproduction task, that minimizes decisional biases that could have influenced the binary forced choice tasks that have previously been used to measure the illusion. This suggests that the Twinkle-Goes illusion is likely perceptual in origin. We also measured the illusion using a task where people made a saccade to the perceived moving object disappearance position, showing the illusion impacts motor planning. The magnitude of the effect in our data was ∼ 22 ms, at most. This is too slight to reflect on full compensation for delayed sensory processing in early visual brain regions (∼67 ms). However, it is possible that our measures have only partially captured the activity of an extrapolation process that is involved in a full compensation for information processing delays, in order to facilitate motor planning - but this possibility remains speculative, and we review counter arguments and evidence.
The Twinkle-Goes illusion impacts motor planning, and is likely perceptual in origin.
Blake W. Saurels,Benjamin R. Jilek,Derek H. Arnold
Published 2025 in Vision Research
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PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2025
- Venue
Vision Research
- Publication date
2025-11-09
- Fields of study
Medicine, Psychology
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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