When a moving surface alternates in colour and direction, perceptual couplings of colour and motion can differ from their physical correspondence. Periods of motion tend to be perceptually bound with physically delayed colours - a colour / motion perceptual asynchrony. This can be eliminated by motion transparency. Here we show that the colour / motion perceptual asynchrony is not invariably eliminated by motion transparency. Nor is it an inevitable consequence given a particular physical input. Instead, it can emerge when moving surfaces are perceived as alternating in direction, even if those surfaces seem transparent, and it is eliminated when surfaces are perceived as moving invariably. For a given observer either situation can result f...
Color-motion asynchrony (CMA) refers to an apparent lag of direction of motion when a dynamic stimul...
SummaryWhether fundamental visual attributes, such as color, motion, and shape, are analyzed separat...
When subjects are asked to perceptually bind rapidly alternating colour and motion stimuli, the pair...
AbstractObservers often pair colours with earlier periods of motion. This observation has prompted t...
AbstractIt has been demonstrated that subjects do not report changes in color and direction of motio...
Observers often pair colours with earlier periods of motion. This observation has prompted the propo...
It has been demonstrated that subjects do not report changes in color and direction of motion as bei...
When a stimulus repeatedly and rapidly changes color (e.g., between red and green) and motion direct...
When a stimulus oscillates in both colour and direction of motion, changes in colour must lag behind...
A color change that is physically simultaneous with the onset of object motion may be perceived as o...
When a stimulus oscillates in both colour and direction of motion, changes in colour must lag behind...
When a stimulus oscillates in both colour and direction of motion, changes in colour must lag behind...
AbstractBehavioural, neuro-anatomical and clinical evidence suggests that different aspects of the v...
It is widely accepted that motion and color are processed in separate brain areas of primates. Numer...
AbstractUnder appropriate stimulus conditions, judgments about the degree of temporal synchrony in s...
Color-motion asynchrony (CMA) refers to an apparent lag of direction of motion when a dynamic stimul...
SummaryWhether fundamental visual attributes, such as color, motion, and shape, are analyzed separat...
When subjects are asked to perceptually bind rapidly alternating colour and motion stimuli, the pair...
AbstractObservers often pair colours with earlier periods of motion. This observation has prompted t...
AbstractIt has been demonstrated that subjects do not report changes in color and direction of motio...
Observers often pair colours with earlier periods of motion. This observation has prompted the propo...
It has been demonstrated that subjects do not report changes in color and direction of motion as bei...
When a stimulus repeatedly and rapidly changes color (e.g., between red and green) and motion direct...
When a stimulus oscillates in both colour and direction of motion, changes in colour must lag behind...
A color change that is physically simultaneous with the onset of object motion may be perceived as o...
When a stimulus oscillates in both colour and direction of motion, changes in colour must lag behind...
When a stimulus oscillates in both colour and direction of motion, changes in colour must lag behind...
AbstractBehavioural, neuro-anatomical and clinical evidence suggests that different aspects of the v...
It is widely accepted that motion and color are processed in separate brain areas of primates. Numer...
AbstractUnder appropriate stimulus conditions, judgments about the degree of temporal synchrony in s...
Color-motion asynchrony (CMA) refers to an apparent lag of direction of motion when a dynamic stimul...
SummaryWhether fundamental visual attributes, such as color, motion, and shape, are analyzed separat...
When subjects are asked to perceptually bind rapidly alternating colour and motion stimuli, the pair...