AbstractEdwards and Badcock (Vision Research 35, 2589, 1995) argued for independent first-order (FO) and second-order (SO) motion systems up to and including the global-motion level. That study used luminance (which they called FO) and contrast (SO) modulated dots. They found that SO noise dots did not mask signal extraction with luminance increment dots while luminance increment dots did mask SO signal extraction. However, they argued this asymmetry was not due to a combined FO–SO pathway, but rather due to the fact that the luminance-modulated dots, being also local variations in contrast, are both FO and SO stimuli. We test their claim of FO and SO independence by using a stimulus that can generate pure FO and SO signals, specifically on...
AbstractA contrast-modulated (CM) pattern is formed when a modulating or envelope function imposes l...
Optical flow fields composed of spatiotemporal luminance modulations (first-order) versus spatiotemp...
Motion perception influences perceived position. It has been shown that first-order (luminance defin...
Edwards and Badcock (Vision Research 35, 2589, 1995) argued for independent first-order (FO) and sec...
AbstractThe intention of this series of experiments was to determine the extent to which the pathway...
AbstractThe experiments reported here address the issue of whether the pathways which extract motion...
AbstractA global dot-motion stimulus was employed in order to investigate the interaction between lu...
The interaction of first- and second-order motion signals at the local-motion-pooling level were inv...
In the visual system, both the local and global stages of motion processing are susceptible to noise...
Motion perception appears to be mediated by, at least, two systems: a first-order and a second-order...
AbstractHuman vision can detect spatiotemporal information conveyed by first-order modulations of lu...
AbstractMotion perception appears to be mediated by, at least, two systems: a first-order and a seco...
Recent research indicates that the early stages of visual-motion analysis involve two parallel neura...
AbstractDespite strong converging evidence that there are separate mechanisms for the processing of ...
AbstractVision is sensitive to first-order modulations of luminance and second-order modulations of ...
AbstractA contrast-modulated (CM) pattern is formed when a modulating or envelope function imposes l...
Optical flow fields composed of spatiotemporal luminance modulations (first-order) versus spatiotemp...
Motion perception influences perceived position. It has been shown that first-order (luminance defin...
Edwards and Badcock (Vision Research 35, 2589, 1995) argued for independent first-order (FO) and sec...
AbstractThe intention of this series of experiments was to determine the extent to which the pathway...
AbstractThe experiments reported here address the issue of whether the pathways which extract motion...
AbstractA global dot-motion stimulus was employed in order to investigate the interaction between lu...
The interaction of first- and second-order motion signals at the local-motion-pooling level were inv...
In the visual system, both the local and global stages of motion processing are susceptible to noise...
Motion perception appears to be mediated by, at least, two systems: a first-order and a second-order...
AbstractHuman vision can detect spatiotemporal information conveyed by first-order modulations of lu...
AbstractMotion perception appears to be mediated by, at least, two systems: a first-order and a seco...
Recent research indicates that the early stages of visual-motion analysis involve two parallel neura...
AbstractDespite strong converging evidence that there are separate mechanisms for the processing of ...
AbstractVision is sensitive to first-order modulations of luminance and second-order modulations of ...
AbstractA contrast-modulated (CM) pattern is formed when a modulating or envelope function imposes l...
Optical flow fields composed of spatiotemporal luminance modulations (first-order) versus spatiotemp...
Motion perception influences perceived position. It has been shown that first-order (luminance defin...