AbstractThe tendency for briefly flashed stimuli to appear to lag behind the spatial position of physically aligned moving stimuli is known as the flash-lag effect. Possibly the simplest explanation for this phenomenon is that transient stimuli are processed more slowly than moving stimuli. We tested this proposal using a task based upon the simultaneous tilt illusion. When an oriented stimulus is surrounded by another oriented stimulus, the inner stimulus can appear to be rotated away from the orientation of the surround. By flashing central static sinewave gratings at specific phases of an annular gratings rotation cycle, we were able to determine the temporal dependence of the tilt illusion. Our results suggest a small, ∼20 ms, processin...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect refers to the phenomenon in which a flash adjacent to a continuously mo...
AbstractIn the flash-lag effect, a flash displayed at the same position as a moving object is percei...
A brief flash, presented in spatial alignment with a moving object, appears to lag behind the moving...
The tendency for briefly flashed stimuli to appear to lag behind the spatial position of physically ...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect refers to the phenomenon where a flash of a stationary stimulus present...
y Coll ersity erime ved in d th heno on th ppea an an all, to the flashed stimulus. Such a small adv...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect is a robust visual illusion in which a flash appears to spatially lag a...
AbstractTo investigate the dynamics of the position computation process for a moving object in human...
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, ...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect (FLE) is defined as an error in localization that consists of perceivin...
AbstractA brief flash presented physically aligned with a moving stimulus is perceived to lag behind...
AbstractIn 1958 MacKay [1] showed that a rigidly moving object becomes visually fragmented when part...
AbstractTwo flash-lag experiments were performed in which the moving object was flashed in a success...
AbstractA moving object is perceived to lie beyond a static object presented at the same time at the...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect refers to the phenomenon in which a flash adjacent to a continuously mo...
AbstractIn the flash-lag effect, a flash displayed at the same position as a moving object is percei...
A brief flash, presented in spatial alignment with a moving object, appears to lag behind the moving...
The tendency for briefly flashed stimuli to appear to lag behind the spatial position of physically ...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect refers to the phenomenon where a flash of a stationary stimulus present...
y Coll ersity erime ved in d th heno on th ppea an an all, to the flashed stimulus. Such a small adv...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect is a robust visual illusion in which a flash appears to spatially lag a...
AbstractTo investigate the dynamics of the position computation process for a moving object in human...
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, ...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect (FLE) is defined as an error in localization that consists of perceivin...
AbstractA brief flash presented physically aligned with a moving stimulus is perceived to lag behind...
AbstractIn 1958 MacKay [1] showed that a rigidly moving object becomes visually fragmented when part...
AbstractTwo flash-lag experiments were performed in which the moving object was flashed in a success...
AbstractA moving object is perceived to lie beyond a static object presented at the same time at the...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect refers to the phenomenon in which a flash adjacent to a continuously mo...
AbstractIn the flash-lag effect, a flash displayed at the same position as a moving object is percei...
A brief flash, presented in spatial alignment with a moving object, appears to lag behind the moving...