AbstractMotion detection can be achieved either with mechanisms sensitive to a target's velocity, or sensitive to change in a target's position. Using a procedure to dissociate these two provided by Nakayama and Tyler (Vis Res 1981;21:427–433), we explored detection of first-order (luminance-based) and various second-order (texture-based and stereo-based) motion. In the first experiment, observers viewed annular gratings oscillating in rotational motion at various rates. For each oscillation temporal frequency, we determined the minimum displacement of the pattern for which observers could reliably see motion. For first-order motion, these motion detection thresholds decreased with increasing temporal frequency, and thus were determined by ...
We measured threshold contours in color space for detecting drifting sinusoidal gratings over a rang...
none5noFast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous t...
Fast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous test pat...
AbstractMotion detection can be achieved either with mechanisms sensitive to a target's velocity, or...
The existence of a second-order motion system distinct from both the first-order and feature trackin...
AbstractWhen a plaid pattern (the sum of two high spatial frequency gratings oriented ±84° from vert...
AbstractThe two-stage decomposition–recombination model of 2D motion perception has been criticised ...
AbstractWe determined two-dimensional motion discrimination contours in the spatio-temporal frequenc...
We measured the ability of human observers to discriminate the direction of motion of ditTerent spat...
We determined two-dimensional motion discrimination contours in the spatio-temporal frequency plane ...
The current study introduces a new illusion in motion perception. The stimulus is a moving object th...
We determined two-dimensional motion discrimination contours in the spatio-temporal frequency plane ...
AbstractConverging psychophysical and electrophysiological evidence suggests that first-order (lumin...
Two techniques are described which have been used to investigate mechanisms underlying the perceptio...
AbstractMany studies have documented that first-order motion influences perceived position. Here, we...
We measured threshold contours in color space for detecting drifting sinusoidal gratings over a rang...
none5noFast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous t...
Fast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous test pat...
AbstractMotion detection can be achieved either with mechanisms sensitive to a target's velocity, or...
The existence of a second-order motion system distinct from both the first-order and feature trackin...
AbstractWhen a plaid pattern (the sum of two high spatial frequency gratings oriented ±84° from vert...
AbstractThe two-stage decomposition–recombination model of 2D motion perception has been criticised ...
AbstractWe determined two-dimensional motion discrimination contours in the spatio-temporal frequenc...
We measured the ability of human observers to discriminate the direction of motion of ditTerent spat...
We determined two-dimensional motion discrimination contours in the spatio-temporal frequency plane ...
The current study introduces a new illusion in motion perception. The stimulus is a moving object th...
We determined two-dimensional motion discrimination contours in the spatio-temporal frequency plane ...
AbstractConverging psychophysical and electrophysiological evidence suggests that first-order (lumin...
Two techniques are described which have been used to investigate mechanisms underlying the perceptio...
AbstractMany studies have documented that first-order motion influences perceived position. Here, we...
We measured threshold contours in color space for detecting drifting sinusoidal gratings over a rang...
none5noFast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous t...
Fast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous test pat...