AbstractIn 1958 MacKay [1] showed that a rigidly moving object becomes visually fragmented when part of it is continuously visible but the rest is illuminated intermittently. For example, the glowing tip of a lit cigarette moving under stroboscopic illumination appeared to move ahead of the intermittently lit body. Latterly rediscovered as “the flash-lag effect” (FLE) [2], this illusion now is typically demonstrated on a computer monitor showing two spots of light, one translating across the screen and another briefly flashed in vertical alignment with it. Despite being physically aligned, the brief flash is seen to lag behind the moving spot. This effect has recently motivated much fruitful research, prompting a variety of potential explan...
AbstractDuring the few past years, there has been a growing interest in the timing and locating of m...
AbstractIn the flash-lag effect (FLE) a moving object is perceived ahead of a stationary stimulus fl...
AbstractAmong other theories, visible persistence has been suggested to explain the flash-lag effect...
AbstractIn 1958 MacKay [1] showed that a rigidly moving object becomes visually fragmented when part...
AbstractA brief flash presented physically aligned with a moving stimulus is perceived to lag behind...
AbstractA moving object is perceived to lie beyond a static object presented at the same time at the...
AbstractThe tendency for briefly flashed stimuli to appear to lag behind the spatial position of phy...
The tendency for briefly flashed stimuli to appear to lag behind the spatial position of physically ...
AbstractA flash that is presented aligned with a moving stimulus appears to lag behind the position ...
In the flash-lag effect a non-moving object is quickly flashed directly underneath a moving object, ...
International audienceIt has long been debated whether visual processing is, at least partially, a d...
AbstractWhen two moving objects are presented in perfect alignment, but are not visible for the same...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect (FLE) is defined as an error in localization that consists of perceivin...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect refers to the phenomenon where a flash of a stationary stimulus present...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect (FLE) is the perceptual phenomenon in which a flash adjacent to a conti...
AbstractDuring the few past years, there has been a growing interest in the timing and locating of m...
AbstractIn the flash-lag effect (FLE) a moving object is perceived ahead of a stationary stimulus fl...
AbstractAmong other theories, visible persistence has been suggested to explain the flash-lag effect...
AbstractIn 1958 MacKay [1] showed that a rigidly moving object becomes visually fragmented when part...
AbstractA brief flash presented physically aligned with a moving stimulus is perceived to lag behind...
AbstractA moving object is perceived to lie beyond a static object presented at the same time at the...
AbstractThe tendency for briefly flashed stimuli to appear to lag behind the spatial position of phy...
The tendency for briefly flashed stimuli to appear to lag behind the spatial position of physically ...
AbstractA flash that is presented aligned with a moving stimulus appears to lag behind the position ...
In the flash-lag effect a non-moving object is quickly flashed directly underneath a moving object, ...
International audienceIt has long been debated whether visual processing is, at least partially, a d...
AbstractWhen two moving objects are presented in perfect alignment, but are not visible for the same...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect (FLE) is defined as an error in localization that consists of perceivin...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect refers to the phenomenon where a flash of a stationary stimulus present...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect (FLE) is the perceptual phenomenon in which a flash adjacent to a conti...
AbstractDuring the few past years, there has been a growing interest in the timing and locating of m...
AbstractIn the flash-lag effect (FLE) a moving object is perceived ahead of a stationary stimulus fl...
AbstractAmong other theories, visible persistence has been suggested to explain the flash-lag effect...