Many activities, such as driving or playing sports, require simultaneous monitoring of multiple, often moving, objects. Such situations tap people's ability to attend selected objects without tracking them with their eyes-this is known as attentional tracking. It has been established that attentional tracking can be affected by the physical speed of a moving target. In the experiments reported here, we showed that this effect is primarily due to apparent speeds, as opposed to physical speeds. We used sensory adaptation-in this case, prolonged exposure to adapting stimuli moving faster or slower than standard test stimuli-to modulate perceived speed. We found performance decrements and increments for apparently sped and slowed test stimuli w...
AbstractEye movements add a constant displacement to the visual scene, altering the retinal-image ve...
AbstractWe evaluated the hypothesis that smooth pursuit eye movements affect speed discrimination th...
AbstractTo investigate whether or not adaptation to second-order motion can cause changes in perceiv...
Many activities, such as driving or playing sports, require simultaneous monitoring of multiple, oft...
AbstractAlthough it is well established that attention affects visual performance in many ways, by u...
Although it is well established that attention affects visual performance in many ways, by using a n...
The apparent physical speed of an object in the field of view remains constant despite variations in...
The ability to perceive changes in motion, such as rapid changes of speed, has important ecological ...
The ability to perceive changes in motion, such as rapid changes of speed, has important ecological ...
Selective attention modulates perceptual learning in motion speed, but previous studies were unable ...
he prevailing view of motion detection in human vision is that the retinal image is convolved with e...
Multiple-object tracking (MOT) studies have shown that tracking ability declines as object speed inc...
Visual judgments of human movement play an important role in social interactions, but relatively lit...
AbstractDuring adaptation to a moving pattern, perceived speed decreases. Thus we know that the adap...
Visual systems adapt to the prevailing image conditions. This improves the ability to discriminate b...
AbstractEye movements add a constant displacement to the visual scene, altering the retinal-image ve...
AbstractWe evaluated the hypothesis that smooth pursuit eye movements affect speed discrimination th...
AbstractTo investigate whether or not adaptation to second-order motion can cause changes in perceiv...
Many activities, such as driving or playing sports, require simultaneous monitoring of multiple, oft...
AbstractAlthough it is well established that attention affects visual performance in many ways, by u...
Although it is well established that attention affects visual performance in many ways, by using a n...
The apparent physical speed of an object in the field of view remains constant despite variations in...
The ability to perceive changes in motion, such as rapid changes of speed, has important ecological ...
The ability to perceive changes in motion, such as rapid changes of speed, has important ecological ...
Selective attention modulates perceptual learning in motion speed, but previous studies were unable ...
he prevailing view of motion detection in human vision is that the retinal image is convolved with e...
Multiple-object tracking (MOT) studies have shown that tracking ability declines as object speed inc...
Visual judgments of human movement play an important role in social interactions, but relatively lit...
AbstractDuring adaptation to a moving pattern, perceived speed decreases. Thus we know that the adap...
Visual systems adapt to the prevailing image conditions. This improves the ability to discriminate b...
AbstractEye movements add a constant displacement to the visual scene, altering the retinal-image ve...
AbstractWe evaluated the hypothesis that smooth pursuit eye movements affect speed discrimination th...
AbstractTo investigate whether or not adaptation to second-order motion can cause changes in perceiv...