AbstractThe perceived direction of a motion step (probe stimulus) can be influenced by an earlier motion step or a brief motion sweep containing a series of steps (biasing stimulus). Depending upon experimental conditions, the biasing of the direction of the probe step (a phase shift of 180°±Φ) by a biasing stimulus which precedes it by approximately 250 ms can either increase (positive filter biasing) or decrease (negative filter biasing) the tendency to see the probe move in the biasing direction as computed with a motion filter with a biphasic temporal impulse response. In a series of experiments it was found that biasing motions traversing 90° of phase angle in fewer than six steps in less than 100 ms produced positive filter biasing. A...
Perceptual decision making refers to the process of making a choice among a series of options based ...
AbstractRetinal motion can modulate visual sensitivity. For instance, low contrast drifting waveform...
Prolonged exposure to visual stimuli causes a bias in observers' responses to subsequent stimuli. Su...
The perceived direction of a motion step (probe stimulus) can be influenced by an earlier motion ste...
AbstractDirection-specific losses in sensitivity were found for a test grating which was superimpose...
Prolonged exposure (adaptation) to a stimulus drifting at a constant speed can bias the perceived sp...
AbstractWe sought to investigate why the direction of second-order motion, unlike first-order motion...
Visual perception is strongly influenced by contextual information. A good example is reference repu...
none5noFast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous t...
Visual perception is strongly influenced by contextual information. A good example is reference repu...
Fast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous test pat...
We describe an unusual motion aftereffect that probes early stages of motion coding psychophysically...
Abstract. Recent findings suggest that the visual system is biased by its past stimulation to detect...
DeValois and DeValois (Vis Research, 31, 1619-1626) have shown that a moving carrier behind a statio...
Fast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous test pat...
Perceptual decision making refers to the process of making a choice among a series of options based ...
AbstractRetinal motion can modulate visual sensitivity. For instance, low contrast drifting waveform...
Prolonged exposure to visual stimuli causes a bias in observers' responses to subsequent stimuli. Su...
The perceived direction of a motion step (probe stimulus) can be influenced by an earlier motion ste...
AbstractDirection-specific losses in sensitivity were found for a test grating which was superimpose...
Prolonged exposure (adaptation) to a stimulus drifting at a constant speed can bias the perceived sp...
AbstractWe sought to investigate why the direction of second-order motion, unlike first-order motion...
Visual perception is strongly influenced by contextual information. A good example is reference repu...
none5noFast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous t...
Visual perception is strongly influenced by contextual information. A good example is reference repu...
Fast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous test pat...
We describe an unusual motion aftereffect that probes early stages of motion coding psychophysically...
Abstract. Recent findings suggest that the visual system is biased by its past stimulation to detect...
DeValois and DeValois (Vis Research, 31, 1619-1626) have shown that a moving carrier behind a statio...
Fast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous test pat...
Perceptual decision making refers to the process of making a choice among a series of options based ...
AbstractRetinal motion can modulate visual sensitivity. For instance, low contrast drifting waveform...
Prolonged exposure to visual stimuli causes a bias in observers' responses to subsequent stimuli. Su...