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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons

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Medicine and Health Sciences

University of Wollongong

Series

2004

Experimental

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Fish Recolonization In Temperate Australian Rockpools: A Quantitative Experimental Approach, Shane Griffiths, Ronald West, Andrew R. Davis, Ken Russell Jan 2004

Fish Recolonization In Temperate Australian Rockpools: A Quantitative Experimental Approach, Shane Griffiths, Ronald West, Andrew R. Davis, Ken Russell

Faculty of Science, Medicine and Health - Papers: part A

Understanding recolonization processes of intertidal fish assemblages is integral for predicting the consequences of significant natural or anthropogenic impacts on the intertidal zone. Recolonization of experimentally defaunated intertidal rockpools by fishes at Bass Point, New South Wales (NSW), Australia, was assessed quantitatively by using one long-term and two short-term studies. Rockpools of similar size and position at four sites within the intertidal zone were repeatedly defaunated of their fish fauna after one week, one month, and three months during two short-term studies in spring and autumn (5 months each), and every six months for the long-term study (12 months). Fish …


Jitter And Size Effects On Vection Are Immune To Experimental Instructions And Demands, Stephen A. Palmisano, Amy Y. Chan Jan 2004

Jitter And Size Effects On Vection Are Immune To Experimental Instructions And Demands, Stephen A. Palmisano, Amy Y. Chan

Faculty of Health and Behavioural Sciences - Papers (Archive)

Both coherent perspective jitter and explicit changing-size cues have been shown to improve the vection induced by radially expanding optic flow. The current study examined whether these stimulus-based vection advantages could be modified by altering cognitions/expectations about both the likelihood of self-motion perception and the purpose of the experiment. In the main experiment, participants were randomly assigned into two groups – one where the cognitive conditions biased participants towards self-motion perception and another where the cognitive conditions biased them towards object motion perception. Contrary to earlier findings by Lepecq et al (1995), we found that identical visual displays were less …