AbstractThe visual system can determine motion and depth from ambiguous information contained in images projected onto both retinas over space and time. The key to the way the system overcomes such ambiguity lies in dependency among multiple cues—such as spatial displacement over time, binocular disparity, and interocular time delay—which might be established based on prior knowledge or experience, and stored in spatiotemporal response characteristics of neurons at an early cortical stage. We conducted a psychophysical investigation of whether a single ambiguous cue (specifically, interocular time delay) permits depth discrimination and motion perception. Data from this investigation are consistent with the predictions derived from the resp...
Under optimal conditions, just 3⁻6 ms of visual stimulation suffices for humans to see motion....
Under optimal conditions, just 3–6 ms of visual stimulation suffices for humans to see motion. Motio...
Under optimal conditions, just 3–6 ms of visual stimulation suffices for humans to see motion. Motio...
To encode binocular disparity, the visual system determines the image patches in one eye that yield ...
Two stereoscopic cues that underlie the perception of motion-in-depth (MID) are changes in retinal d...
Two stereoscopic cues that underlie the perception of motion-in-depth (MID) are changes in retinal d...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2013.When we m...
When an object moves in three dimensions, the two eyes' views of the world deliver slightly differen...
AbstractChanging disparity (CD) and interocular velocity difference (IOVD) are two possible mechanis...
To perceive the visual world as three-dimensional, the brain has to reconstruct spatial structure fr...
Many everyday interactions with moving objects benefit from an accurate perception of their movement...
There are two ways to detect a displacement in stereoscopic depth, namely by monitoring the change i...
Motion and binocular disparity are two features in our environment that share a common correspondenc...
A series of experiments is reported that examined the perception of the depth structure of a visual ...
Motion and binocular disparity are two features in our environment that share a common correspondenc...
Under optimal conditions, just 3⁻6 ms of visual stimulation suffices for humans to see motion....
Under optimal conditions, just 3–6 ms of visual stimulation suffices for humans to see motion. Motio...
Under optimal conditions, just 3–6 ms of visual stimulation suffices for humans to see motion. Motio...
To encode binocular disparity, the visual system determines the image patches in one eye that yield ...
Two stereoscopic cues that underlie the perception of motion-in-depth (MID) are changes in retinal d...
Two stereoscopic cues that underlie the perception of motion-in-depth (MID) are changes in retinal d...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2013.When we m...
When an object moves in three dimensions, the two eyes' views of the world deliver slightly differen...
AbstractChanging disparity (CD) and interocular velocity difference (IOVD) are two possible mechanis...
To perceive the visual world as three-dimensional, the brain has to reconstruct spatial structure fr...
Many everyday interactions with moving objects benefit from an accurate perception of their movement...
There are two ways to detect a displacement in stereoscopic depth, namely by monitoring the change i...
Motion and binocular disparity are two features in our environment that share a common correspondenc...
A series of experiments is reported that examined the perception of the depth structure of a visual ...
Motion and binocular disparity are two features in our environment that share a common correspondenc...
Under optimal conditions, just 3⁻6 ms of visual stimulation suffices for humans to see motion....
Under optimal conditions, just 3–6 ms of visual stimulation suffices for humans to see motion. Motio...
Under optimal conditions, just 3–6 ms of visual stimulation suffices for humans to see motion. Motio...