Understanding natural dynamics. |
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Authors: | Proffitt, Dennis R. Gilden, David L. |
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Abstract: | When making dynamical judgments, people can make effective use of only one salient dimension of information present in the event. The adequacy of dynamical judgments depends on the degree of dimensionality that is both inherent in the physics of the event and presumed to be present by the observer. There are two classes of physical motion contexts in which objects may appear. In the simplest class, there exists only one dynamically relevant object parameter: the position over time of the object's center of mass. In the other class of motion contexts, there are additional object attributes, such as mass distribution and orientation, that are of dynamical relevance. A survey of commonsense understandings showed that people are relatively accurate when specific dynamical judgments can be accurately based on a single information dimension; however, erroneous judgments are pervasive when simple motion contexts are misconstrued as being multidimensional, and when multidimensional quantities are the necessary basis for accurate judgments. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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