AbstractA moving object is perceived to lie beyond a static object presented at the same time at the same retinal location (flash-lag effect or FLE). Some studies report that if the moving stimulus stops moving (flash-terminated condition or FTC) the instant the flash occurs, a FLE does not occur. Other studies, using different stimuli, report that the FLE does, in fact, occur in the FTC. The FTC is thus a crucial turning point in theories of flash-lag. Unraveling the mystery of the FLE in the FTC will help unravel the mechanisms underpinning flash-lag and perhaps even perceptual localization in general. Our experiments show that eccentricity of the moving stimulus was a contributing factor, as were eccentricity of the flashed stimulus and ...
AbstractA flash that is presented aligned with a moving stimulus appears to lag behind the position ...
AbstractDuring the few past years, there has been a growing interest in the timing and locating of m...
In the flash-lag illusion, a moving object aligned with a flash is perceived to be offset in the dir...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect (FLE) is defined as an error in localization that consists of perceivin...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect (FLE) is defined as an error in localization that consists of perceivin...
Several accounts put forth to explain the flash-lag effect (FLE) rely mainly on either spatial or te...
International audienceDue to its inherent neural delays, the visual system has an outdated access to...
International audienceDue to its inherent neural delays, the visual system has an outdated access to...
International audienceDue to its inherent neural delays, the visual system has an outdated access to...
International audienceDue to its inherent neural delays, the visual system has an outdated access to...
International audienceDue to its inherent neural delays, the visual system has an outdated access to...
Several accounts put forth to explain the flash-lag effect (FLE) rely mainly on either spatial or te...
International audienceDue to its inherent neural delays, the visual system has an outdated access to...
When observers are asked to localize the onset or the offset position of a moving target, they typic...
ABSTRACT—The flash-lag effect, inwhich amoving object is perceived ahead of a colocalized flash, has...
AbstractA flash that is presented aligned with a moving stimulus appears to lag behind the position ...
AbstractDuring the few past years, there has been a growing interest in the timing and locating of m...
In the flash-lag illusion, a moving object aligned with a flash is perceived to be offset in the dir...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect (FLE) is defined as an error in localization that consists of perceivin...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect (FLE) is defined as an error in localization that consists of perceivin...
Several accounts put forth to explain the flash-lag effect (FLE) rely mainly on either spatial or te...
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...
Several accounts put forth to explain the flash-lag effect (FLE) rely mainly on either spatial or te...
International audienceDue to its inherent neural delays, the visual system has an outdated access to...
When observers are asked to localize the onset or the offset position of a moving target, they typic...
ABSTRACT—The flash-lag effect, inwhich amoving object is perceived ahead of a colocalized flash, has...
AbstractA flash that is presented aligned with a moving stimulus appears to lag behind the position ...
AbstractDuring the few past years, there has been a growing interest in the timing and locating of m...
In the flash-lag illusion, a moving object aligned with a flash is perceived to be offset in the dir...