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Multiple object tracking, or MOT, is a versatile experimental paradigm developed by Zenon Pylyshyn for studying sustained visual attention in a dynamic environment in 1988. It was first developed in order to support visual indexing theory (FINST theory). MOT was then commonly used as an experimental technique in order to study how our visual system tracks multiple moving objects. Dozens or perhaps hundreds of modified MOT experiments have been conducted as a continuous attention-demanding task to further understanding human's visual and cognitive function.

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  • Multiple object tracking, or MOT, is a versatile experimental paradigm developed by Zenon Pylyshyn for studying sustained visual attention in a dynamic environment in 1988. It was first developed in order to support visual indexing theory (FINST theory). MOT was then commonly used as an experimental technique in order to study how our visual system tracks multiple moving objects. Dozens or perhaps hundreds of modified MOT experiments have been conducted as a continuous attention-demanding task to further understanding human's visual and cognitive function. (en)
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  • Multiple object tracking, or MOT, is a versatile experimental paradigm developed by Zenon Pylyshyn for studying sustained visual attention in a dynamic environment in 1988. It was first developed in order to support visual indexing theory (FINST theory). MOT was then commonly used as an experimental technique in order to study how our visual system tracks multiple moving objects. Dozens or perhaps hundreds of modified MOT experiments have been conducted as a continuous attention-demanding task to further understanding human's visual and cognitive function. (en)
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  • Multiple object tracking (en)
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