Two sets of dots moving in opposite directions are usually seen as two transparent surfaces. Deciding which surface is in front of the other is bistable and observers exhibit strong biases to see one particular motion direction in front. Surprisingly, biases are dependent on stimulus orientation in a persistent, idiosyncratic, and irrelevant manner. We investigated here whether this preferred direction is arbitrarily fixed or can instead be updated from the context. Observers performed two tasks alternately. One task was to report the surface seen in front in a transparent motion stimulus. The other task was a visual search for a slow dot. Unknown to the observers, we systematically paired the target dot with one surface direction in an att...
Multiple dots moving independently back and forth on a flat screen induce a compelling illusion of a...
AbstractJudging the motion of objects is a fundamental task that the visual system executes in every...
Previous studies of the motion aperture problem have shown that the direction of grating motion can ...
Two sets of dots moving in opposite directions are usually seen as two transparent surfaces. Decidin...
In motion transparency, one surface is very often seen on top of the other in spite of no proper dep...
AbstractHuman observers can extract a given motion direction from sets of random dots moving simulta...
Multiple dots moving independently back and forth on a flat screen induce a compelling illusion of a...
We examined what role motion-streak-like form information plays in heading perception. We presented ...
Abstract. Recent findings suggest that the visual system is biased by its past stimulation to detect...
Multiple dots moving independently back and forth on a flat screen induce a compelling illusion of a...
AbstractApparent motion is an illusory perception of movement that can be induced by alternating pre...
The aim of this study was to determine whether there is a link between the statistical properties of...
Previous studies of the motion aperture problem have shown that the direction of grating motion can ...
Apparent motion is an illusory perception of movement that can be induced by alternating presentatio...
Apparent motion is an illusory perception of movement that can be induced by alternating presentatio...
Multiple dots moving independently back and forth on a flat screen induce a compelling illusion of a...
AbstractJudging the motion of objects is a fundamental task that the visual system executes in every...
Previous studies of the motion aperture problem have shown that the direction of grating motion can ...
Two sets of dots moving in opposite directions are usually seen as two transparent surfaces. Decidin...
In motion transparency, one surface is very often seen on top of the other in spite of no proper dep...
AbstractHuman observers can extract a given motion direction from sets of random dots moving simulta...
Multiple dots moving independently back and forth on a flat screen induce a compelling illusion of a...
We examined what role motion-streak-like form information plays in heading perception. We presented ...
Abstract. Recent findings suggest that the visual system is biased by its past stimulation to detect...
Multiple dots moving independently back and forth on a flat screen induce a compelling illusion of a...
AbstractApparent motion is an illusory perception of movement that can be induced by alternating pre...
The aim of this study was to determine whether there is a link between the statistical properties of...
Previous studies of the motion aperture problem have shown that the direction of grating motion can ...
Apparent motion is an illusory perception of movement that can be induced by alternating presentatio...
Apparent motion is an illusory perception of movement that can be induced by alternating presentatio...
Multiple dots moving independently back and forth on a flat screen induce a compelling illusion of a...
AbstractJudging the motion of objects is a fundamental task that the visual system executes in every...
Previous studies of the motion aperture problem have shown that the direction of grating motion can ...