TY - JOUR AB - In three experiments, we tested whether sequentially coding two visual stimuli can create a spatial misperception of a visual moving stimulus. In Experiment 1, we showed that a spatial misperception, the flash-lag effect, is accompanied by a similar temporal misperception of first perceiving the flash and only then a change of the moving stimulus, when in fact the two events were exactly simultaneous. In Experiment 2, we demonstrated that when the spatial misperception of a flash-lag effect is absent, the temporal misperception is also absent. In Experiment 3, we extended these findings and showed that if the stimulus conditions require coding first a flash and subsequently a nearby moving stimulus, a spatial flash-lag effect is found, with the position of the moving stimulus being misperceived as shifted in the direction of its motion, whereas this spatial misperception is reversed so that the moving stimulus is misperceived as shifted in a direction opposite to its motion when the c AU - Priess, Heinz-Werner AU - Scharlau, Ingrid AU - Becker, Stefanie I. AU - Ansorge, Ulrich ID - 6085 IS - 2 JF - Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics KW - spatial mislocalization KW - sequential coding KW - stimulus parameters KW - Attention KW - Discrimination (Psychology) KW - Humans KW - Judgment KW - Motion Perception KW - Optical Illusions KW - Orientation KW - Pattern Recognition KW - Visual KW - Psychophysics KW - Space Perception KW - Cognitive Processes KW - Motion Perception KW - Perceptual Localization KW - Spatial Perception KW - Stimulus Parameters KW - Consequence SN - 1943-3921 TI - Spatial mislocalization as a consequence of sequential coding of stimuli. VL - 74 ER -