One of the more stunning examples of the resourcefulness of human vision is the 
ability to see 'biological motion', which was first shown with an adaptation of 
earlier cinematic work: illumination of only the joints of a walking person is 
enough to convey a vivid, compelling impression of human animation, although the 
percept collapses to a jumble of meaningless lights when the walker stands still. 
The information is sufficient to discriminate the sex and other details of the 
walker, and can be interpreted by young infants. Here we measure the ability of 
the visual system to integrate this type of motion information over space and 
time, and compare this capacity with that for viewing simple translational motion. 
Sensitivity to biological motion increases rapidly with the number of illuminated 
joints, far more rapidly than for simple motion. Furthermore, this information 
is summed over extended temporal intervals of up to 3 seconds (eight times longer 
than for simple motion). The steepness of the summation curves indicates that 
the mechanisms that analyse biological motion do not integrate linearly over space 
and time with constant efficiency, as may occur for other forms of complex motion, 
but instead adapt to the nature of the stimulus. 
  
 
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 Maintained by Francis F. Steen, Communication Studies, University of California Los Angeles | |||||||