Many individuals with normal visual acuity are unable to discriminate the direction of 3-D motion in a portion of their visual field, a deficit previously referred to as a stereomotion scotoma. The origin of this visual deficit has remained unclear. We hypothesized that the impairment is due to a failure in the processing of one of the two binocular cues to motion in depth: changes in binocular disparity over time or interocular velocity differences. We isolated the contributions of these two cues and found that sensitivity to interocular velocity differences, but not changes in binocular disparity, varied systematically with observers' ability to judge motion direction. We therefore conclude that the inability to interpret motion in depth ...
AbstractUnder a variety of conditions, motion in depth from binocular cues is harder to detect than ...
Under a variety of conditions, motion in depth from binocular cues is harder to detect than lateral ...
Under a variety of conditions, motion in depth from binocular cues is harder to detect than lateral ...
Many individuals with normal visual acuity are unable to discriminate the direction of 3-D motion in...
Many individuals with normal visual acuity are unable to discriminate the direction of 3-D motion in...
Many individuals with normal visual acuity are unable to discriminate the direction of 3-D motion in...
Many individuals with normal visual acuity are unable to discriminate the direction of 3-D motion in...
Stereomotion scotomas are a surprisingly common visual impairment that result in an observer's inabi...
Stereomotion scotomas are a surprisingly common visual impairment that result in an observer's inabi...
Stereomotion scotomas are a surprisingly common visual impairment that result in an observer's inabi...
Purpose: Two binocular sources of information serve motion-in-depth (MID) perception: changes in dis...
Purpose: Two binocular sources of information serve motion-in-depth (MID) perception: changes in dis...
AbstractAn object moving in depth produces retinal images that change in position over time by diffe...
AbstractStereomotion scotomas are a surprisingly common visual impairment that result in an observer...
Under a variety of conditions, motion in depth from binocular cues is harder to detect than lateral ...
AbstractUnder a variety of conditions, motion in depth from binocular cues is harder to detect than ...
Under a variety of conditions, motion in depth from binocular cues is harder to detect than lateral ...
Under a variety of conditions, motion in depth from binocular cues is harder to detect than lateral ...
Many individuals with normal visual acuity are unable to discriminate the direction of 3-D motion in...
Many individuals with normal visual acuity are unable to discriminate the direction of 3-D motion in...
Many individuals with normal visual acuity are unable to discriminate the direction of 3-D motion in...
Many individuals with normal visual acuity are unable to discriminate the direction of 3-D motion in...
Stereomotion scotomas are a surprisingly common visual impairment that result in an observer's inabi...
Stereomotion scotomas are a surprisingly common visual impairment that result in an observer's inabi...
Stereomotion scotomas are a surprisingly common visual impairment that result in an observer's inabi...
Purpose: Two binocular sources of information serve motion-in-depth (MID) perception: changes in dis...
Purpose: Two binocular sources of information serve motion-in-depth (MID) perception: changes in dis...
AbstractAn object moving in depth produces retinal images that change in position over time by diffe...
AbstractStereomotion scotomas are a surprisingly common visual impairment that result in an observer...
Under a variety of conditions, motion in depth from binocular cues is harder to detect than lateral ...
AbstractUnder a variety of conditions, motion in depth from binocular cues is harder to detect than ...
Under a variety of conditions, motion in depth from binocular cues is harder to detect than lateral ...
Under a variety of conditions, motion in depth from binocular cues is harder to detect than lateral ...