AbstractSeveral visual illusions demonstrate that the neural processing of visual position can be affected by visual motion. Well-known examples are the flash-lag, flash-drag, and flash-jump effect. However, where and when in the visual processing hierarchy such interactions take place is unclear. Here, we used a variant of the flash-grab illusion (Vision Research 91 (2013), pp. 8–20) to shift the perceived positions of flashed stimuli, and applied multivariate pattern classification to individual 64-channel EEG trials to dissociate neural signals corresponding to veridical versus perceived position with high temporal resolution. We show illusory effects of motion on perceived position in three separate analyses: (1) A classifier can distin...
AbstractMotion is known to distort visual space, producing illusory mislocalizations for flashed obj...
ABSTRACT—The flash-lag effect, inwhich amoving object is perceived ahead of a colocalized flash, has...
AbstractMotion can influence the perceived position of nearby stationary objects (Nature Neuroscienc...
AbstractSeveral visual illusions demonstrate that the neural processing of visual position can be af...
A range of visual illusions, including the much-studied flash-lag effect, demonstrate that neural si...
International audienceDue to its inherent neural delays, the visual system has an outdated access to...
International audienceDue to its inherent neural delays, the visual system has an outdated access to...
International audienceDue to its inherent neural delays, the visual system has an outdated access to...
International audienceDue to its inherent neural delays, the visual system has an outdated access to...
International audienceDue to its inherent neural delays, the visual system has an outdated access to...
International audienceDue to its inherent neural delays, the visual system has an outdated access to...
In the flash-lag illusion, a moving object aligned with a flash is perceived to be offset in the dir...
Neural processing of sensory input in the brain takes time, and for that reason our awareness of vis...
AbstractA moving object is perceived to lie beyond a static object presented at the same time at the...
When the brain has determined the position of a moving object, because of anatomical and processing ...
AbstractMotion is known to distort visual space, producing illusory mislocalizations for flashed obj...
ABSTRACT—The flash-lag effect, inwhich amoving object is perceived ahead of a colocalized flash, has...
AbstractMotion can influence the perceived position of nearby stationary objects (Nature Neuroscienc...
AbstractSeveral visual illusions demonstrate that the neural processing of visual position can be af...
A range of visual illusions, including the much-studied flash-lag effect, demonstrate that neural si...
International audienceDue to its inherent neural delays, the visual system has an outdated access to...
International audienceDue to its inherent neural delays, the visual system has an outdated access to...
International audienceDue to its inherent neural delays, the visual system has an outdated access to...
International audienceDue to its inherent neural delays, the visual system has an outdated access to...
International audienceDue to its inherent neural delays, the visual system has an outdated access to...
International audienceDue to its inherent neural delays, the visual system has an outdated access to...
In the flash-lag illusion, a moving object aligned with a flash is perceived to be offset in the dir...
Neural processing of sensory input in the brain takes time, and for that reason our awareness of vis...
AbstractA moving object is perceived to lie beyond a static object presented at the same time at the...
When the brain has determined the position of a moving object, because of anatomical and processing ...
AbstractMotion is known to distort visual space, producing illusory mislocalizations for flashed obj...
ABSTRACT—The flash-lag effect, inwhich amoving object is perceived ahead of a colocalized flash, has...
AbstractMotion can influence the perceived position of nearby stationary objects (Nature Neuroscienc...