AbstractPreviously, Edwards, Pope & Schoor, Vision Research, 38, 705–717, demonstrated that transient disparity vergence appears to be mediated by a system that employs a single low-pass sensitive spatial channel whose performance is not reduced by dichoptic mixed contrasts (no contrast paradox) or dichoptic mixed spatial frequencies. This broadband tuning to both contrast and spatial frequency may be indicative of a second-order or non-linear envelope extraction system. The current study tests for lack of tuning to orientation and luminance polarity which are typically taken as evidence of a second-order system.We found that when the transient vergence system was simultaneously presented with both convergent and divergent disparities, ther...
AbstractWe compared the mechanisms responsible for orientation discrimination of stimuli defined by ...
AbstractThe tuning of the transient-stereopsis system to luminance contrast and spatial-frequency (S...
AbstractVernier acuity for opposite-contrast polarity stimuli clearly poses problems for local contr...
AbstractPreviously, Edwards, Pope & Schoor, Vision Research, 38, 705–717, demonstrated that transien...
AbstractOur prior studies have demonstrated that the transient-vergence system responds preferably t...
AbstractVergence has transient components that are stimulated by brief presentations of stimuli at l...
AbstractStereo-perception appears to be mediated by at least two systems: a transient system that pr...
AbstractBinocular disparities applied to large-field patterns elicit vergence eye movements at ultra...
AbstractThe ability of observers to extract depth from opposite luminance-contrast-polarity stimuli ...
AbstractVergence eye movements were elicited in human subjects by applying disparities to square-wav...
AbstractStereopsis is the sense of depth derived from binocular disparities that are formed between ...
AbstractDisparity-evoked vergence is studied in stereograms showing one or two depth planes which ar...
AbstractVergence eye movements were elicited in human subjects at short latencies (∼70ms) by applyin...
Disparity-evoked vergence is studied in stereograms showing one or two depth planes which are define...
Small disparity stimuli applied to large random-dot patterns elicit machine-like vergence eye moveme...
AbstractWe compared the mechanisms responsible for orientation discrimination of stimuli defined by ...
AbstractThe tuning of the transient-stereopsis system to luminance contrast and spatial-frequency (S...
AbstractVernier acuity for opposite-contrast polarity stimuli clearly poses problems for local contr...
AbstractPreviously, Edwards, Pope & Schoor, Vision Research, 38, 705–717, demonstrated that transien...
AbstractOur prior studies have demonstrated that the transient-vergence system responds preferably t...
AbstractVergence has transient components that are stimulated by brief presentations of stimuli at l...
AbstractStereo-perception appears to be mediated by at least two systems: a transient system that pr...
AbstractBinocular disparities applied to large-field patterns elicit vergence eye movements at ultra...
AbstractThe ability of observers to extract depth from opposite luminance-contrast-polarity stimuli ...
AbstractVergence eye movements were elicited in human subjects by applying disparities to square-wav...
AbstractStereopsis is the sense of depth derived from binocular disparities that are formed between ...
AbstractDisparity-evoked vergence is studied in stereograms showing one or two depth planes which ar...
AbstractVergence eye movements were elicited in human subjects at short latencies (∼70ms) by applyin...
Disparity-evoked vergence is studied in stereograms showing one or two depth planes which are define...
Small disparity stimuli applied to large random-dot patterns elicit machine-like vergence eye moveme...
AbstractWe compared the mechanisms responsible for orientation discrimination of stimuli defined by ...
AbstractThe tuning of the transient-stereopsis system to luminance contrast and spatial-frequency (S...
AbstractVernier acuity for opposite-contrast polarity stimuli clearly poses problems for local contr...