YesThe goal of this study was to investigate the reference frames used in perceptual encoding and storage of visual motion information. In our experiments, observers viewed multiple moving objects and reported the direction of motion of a randomly selected item. Using a vector-decomposition technique, we computed performance during smooth pursuit with respect to a spatiotopic (nonretinotopic) and to a retinotopic component and compared them with performance during fixation, which served as the baseline. For the stimulus encoding stage, which precedes memory, we found that the reference frame depends on the stimulus set size. For a single moving target, the spatiotopic reference frame had the most significant contribution with so...
Most of our mental processes rely on memorization, and dysfunctions of memory systems can lead to se...
PURPOSE: Studies on motion processing using multiple-object tracking indicates that the bottleneck ...
The processing of motion changes throughout the visual hierarchy, from spatially restricted ‘local m...
AbstractThe retinotopic projection of stimulus motion depends both on the motion of the stimulus and...
The spatial representation of a visual scene in the early visual system is well known. The optics of...
We investigated how the visual system selects a reference frame for the perception of motion. Two co...
AbstractMany visual attributes of a target stimulus are computed according to dynamic, non-retinotop...
The first stage of the Atkinson–Shiffrin model of human memory is a sensory memory (SM). The visual ...
The first stage of the Atkinson–Shiffrin model of human memory is a sensory memory (SM). The visual ...
Perception depends on reference frames. For example, the "true'' cycloidal motion trajectory of a re...
Visual processing starts with retinotopic encoding: neighboring points in the real world are project...
It may be hard to fathom, but our eyes make 3-5 fixations every second, connected by short, rapid ey...
AbstractThe human visual system computes features of moving objects with high precision despite the ...
AbstractOne of the hallmarks of perceptual learning is specificity, the lack of transfer of the impr...
AbstractOne classic piece of evidence for an efference copy signal of eye position is that a small, ...
Most of our mental processes rely on memorization, and dysfunctions of memory systems can lead to se...
PURPOSE: Studies on motion processing using multiple-object tracking indicates that the bottleneck ...
The processing of motion changes throughout the visual hierarchy, from spatially restricted ‘local m...
AbstractThe retinotopic projection of stimulus motion depends both on the motion of the stimulus and...
The spatial representation of a visual scene in the early visual system is well known. The optics of...
We investigated how the visual system selects a reference frame for the perception of motion. Two co...
AbstractMany visual attributes of a target stimulus are computed according to dynamic, non-retinotop...
The first stage of the Atkinson–Shiffrin model of human memory is a sensory memory (SM). The visual ...
The first stage of the Atkinson–Shiffrin model of human memory is a sensory memory (SM). The visual ...
Perception depends on reference frames. For example, the "true'' cycloidal motion trajectory of a re...
Visual processing starts with retinotopic encoding: neighboring points in the real world are project...
It may be hard to fathom, but our eyes make 3-5 fixations every second, connected by short, rapid ey...
AbstractThe human visual system computes features of moving objects with high precision despite the ...
AbstractOne of the hallmarks of perceptual learning is specificity, the lack of transfer of the impr...
AbstractOne classic piece of evidence for an efference copy signal of eye position is that a small, ...
Most of our mental processes rely on memorization, and dysfunctions of memory systems can lead to se...
PURPOSE: Studies on motion processing using multiple-object tracking indicates that the bottleneck ...
The processing of motion changes throughout the visual hierarchy, from spatially restricted ‘local m...