AbstractThe ability of infants to discriminate between opposite directions of motion was examined in infant control habituation experiments. A group of 3–5-week-olds showed no evidence of discrimination between a random-dot pattern which was segregated into regions that moved in opposite directions, and a uniform pattern in which the dots all moved in the same direction. However, they did discriminate between segregated and uniform patterns in two additional conditions, neither of which required sensitivity to direction: in the first of these, segregation was based on the contrast between coherently moving and stationary dots, while in the second the contrast was between coherently and incoherently moving dots. Unlike the younger infants, a...
AbstractIn order to investigate the presence of directionally selective mechanisms in 3-month-old in...
Optokinetic nystagmus (OKN) can be demonstrated from birth, but behavioural discrimination tasks suc...
We investigated infants ’ sensitivity to spatiotemporal structure. In Experiment 1, circles appeared...
AbstractThe ability of infants to discriminate between opposite directions of motion was examined in...
AbstractThe ability of infants to discriminate between opposite directions of motion was assessed us...
AbstractAlthough adults can detect direction differences as small as 1 arc degree, the ability of in...
The experiments of this thesis have used apparent motion in random-dot patterns to explore the devel...
AbstractThese experiments used forced-choice preferential looking to test infants for preferences be...
One of the most powerful sources of information about spatial relationships avail-able to mobile org...
Although considerable progress has been made in understanding how adults perceive their direction of...
AbstractWe conducted four experiments on the development of motion perception in a total of 109 3- t...
Previous research has demonstrated that newborn infants are capable of discriminating stationary obj...
AbstractUniform motion across the retina is a powerful cue to the perception of self-motion. In spit...
AbstractOptokinetic nystagmus (OKN) can be demonstrated from birth, but behavioural discrimination t...
AbstractAdults combine different local motions to form a global percept of motion. This study explor...
AbstractIn order to investigate the presence of directionally selective mechanisms in 3-month-old in...
Optokinetic nystagmus (OKN) can be demonstrated from birth, but behavioural discrimination tasks suc...
We investigated infants ’ sensitivity to spatiotemporal structure. In Experiment 1, circles appeared...
AbstractThe ability of infants to discriminate between opposite directions of motion was examined in...
AbstractThe ability of infants to discriminate between opposite directions of motion was assessed us...
AbstractAlthough adults can detect direction differences as small as 1 arc degree, the ability of in...
The experiments of this thesis have used apparent motion in random-dot patterns to explore the devel...
AbstractThese experiments used forced-choice preferential looking to test infants for preferences be...
One of the most powerful sources of information about spatial relationships avail-able to mobile org...
Although considerable progress has been made in understanding how adults perceive their direction of...
AbstractWe conducted four experiments on the development of motion perception in a total of 109 3- t...
Previous research has demonstrated that newborn infants are capable of discriminating stationary obj...
AbstractUniform motion across the retina is a powerful cue to the perception of self-motion. In spit...
AbstractOptokinetic nystagmus (OKN) can be demonstrated from birth, but behavioural discrimination t...
AbstractAdults combine different local motions to form a global percept of motion. This study explor...
AbstractIn order to investigate the presence of directionally selective mechanisms in 3-month-old in...
Optokinetic nystagmus (OKN) can be demonstrated from birth, but behavioural discrimination tasks suc...
We investigated infants ’ sensitivity to spatiotemporal structure. In Experiment 1, circles appeared...