AbstractIn the motion aftereffect (MAE), a stationary pattern appears to move in the opposite direction to previously viewed motion. Here we report an MAE that is observed for a putatively high level of visual analysis—attentive tracking. These high-level MAEs, visible on dynamic (but not static) tests, suggest that attentive tracking does not simply enhance low-level motion signals but, rather, acts at a subsequent stage. MAEs from tracking (1) can overrule competing MAEs from adaptation to low-level motion, (2) can be established opposite to low-level MAEs seen on static tests at the same location, and (3), most striking, are specific to the overall direction of object motion, even at nonadapted locations. These distinctive properties sug...
After a prolonged exposure to directional motion (adaptation), a subsequently presented stationary t...
In the literature about the effect of attention on motion processing, it is clear that attention imp...
Activity in the human motion complex (hMT(+)/V5) is related to the perception of motion, be it eithe...
AbstractIn the motion aftereffect (MAE), a stationary pattern appears to move in the opposite direct...
AbstractWe have studied the effects of voluntary attention on the induction of motion aftereffects (...
We have studied the effects of voluntary attention on the induction of motion aftereffects (MAEs). W...
The motion aftereffect (MAE) provides a behavioural probe into the mechanisms underlying motion perc...
AbstractOne of the many interesting questions in motion aftereffect (MAE) research is concerned with...
After prolonged adaptation to a moving pattern, a subsequently presented static or dynamic test patt...
AbstractAlthough second-order motion may be detected by early and automatic mechanisms, some models ...
AbstractAttention-based motion perception refers to the phenomenon that a stimulus with ambiguous mo...
AbstractThis study attempts to isolate the underlying processing resources of visual attention from ...
AbstractActivation of the human visual motion area V5/MT was previously thought to be the basis of t...
AbstractIt has been suggested that attention can disambiguate stimuli that have equal motion energy ...
AbstractThe visual motion aftereffect (MAE) typically occurs when stationary contours are presented ...
After a prolonged exposure to directional motion (adaptation), a subsequently presented stationary t...
In the literature about the effect of attention on motion processing, it is clear that attention imp...
Activity in the human motion complex (hMT(+)/V5) is related to the perception of motion, be it eithe...
AbstractIn the motion aftereffect (MAE), a stationary pattern appears to move in the opposite direct...
AbstractWe have studied the effects of voluntary attention on the induction of motion aftereffects (...
We have studied the effects of voluntary attention on the induction of motion aftereffects (MAEs). W...
The motion aftereffect (MAE) provides a behavioural probe into the mechanisms underlying motion perc...
AbstractOne of the many interesting questions in motion aftereffect (MAE) research is concerned with...
After prolonged adaptation to a moving pattern, a subsequently presented static or dynamic test patt...
AbstractAlthough second-order motion may be detected by early and automatic mechanisms, some models ...
AbstractAttention-based motion perception refers to the phenomenon that a stimulus with ambiguous mo...
AbstractThis study attempts to isolate the underlying processing resources of visual attention from ...
AbstractActivation of the human visual motion area V5/MT was previously thought to be the basis of t...
AbstractIt has been suggested that attention can disambiguate stimuli that have equal motion energy ...
AbstractThe visual motion aftereffect (MAE) typically occurs when stationary contours are presented ...
After a prolonged exposure to directional motion (adaptation), a subsequently presented stationary t...
In the literature about the effect of attention on motion processing, it is clear that attention imp...
Activity in the human motion complex (hMT(+)/V5) is related to the perception of motion, be it eithe...