AbstractA brief flash presented physically aligned with a moving stimulus is perceived to lag behind, a well studied phenomenon termed the Flash-Lag Effect (FLE). It has been recently shown that the FLE also occurs in audition, as well as cross-modally between vision and audition. The present study has two goals: to investigate the acoustic and cross-modal FLE using a random motion technique; and to investigate whether neural latencies may account for the FLE in general. The random motion technique revealed a strong cross-modal FLE for visual motion stimuli and auditory probes, but not for the other conditions. Visual and auditory latencies for stimulus appearance and for motion were measured with three techniques: integration, temporal ali...
AbstractIn the flash-lag effect (FLE) a moving object is perceived ahead of a stationary stimulus fl...
History and theory of flash-lag: past, present, and future gerrit w. maus, beena khurana, and romi n...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect refers to the phenomenon where a flash of a stationary stimulus present...
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...
Several accounts put forth to explain the flash-lag effect (FLE) rely mainly on either spatial or te...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect (FLE) is defined as an error in localization that consists of perceivin...
AbstractA flash that is presented aligned with a moving stimulus appears to lag behind the position ...
The tendency for briefly flashed stimuli to appear to lag behind the spatial position of physically ...
AbstractThe tendency for briefly flashed stimuli to appear to lag behind the spatial position of phy...
Background: When a moving stimulus and a briefly flashed static stimulus are physically aligned in s...
AbstractA moving object is perceived to lie beyond a static object presented at the same time at the...
Abstract-In flash-lag effect (FLE), the position of a moving object is perceived to be ahead of a br...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect refers to the phenomenon in which a flash adjacent to a continuously mo...
AbstractWhen two moving objects are presented in perfect alignment, but are not visible for the same...
AbstractIn the flash-lag effect (FLE) a moving object is perceived ahead of a stationary stimulus fl...
History and theory of flash-lag: past, present, and future gerrit w. maus, beena khurana, and romi n...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect refers to the phenomenon where a flash of a stationary stimulus present...
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...
Several accounts put forth to explain the flash-lag effect (FLE) rely mainly on either spatial or te...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect (FLE) is defined as an error in localization that consists of perceivin...
AbstractA flash that is presented aligned with a moving stimulus appears to lag behind the position ...
The tendency for briefly flashed stimuli to appear to lag behind the spatial position of physically ...
AbstractThe tendency for briefly flashed stimuli to appear to lag behind the spatial position of phy...
Background: When a moving stimulus and a briefly flashed static stimulus are physically aligned in s...
AbstractA moving object is perceived to lie beyond a static object presented at the same time at the...
Abstract-In flash-lag effect (FLE), the position of a moving object is perceived to be ahead of a br...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect refers to the phenomenon in which a flash adjacent to a continuously mo...
AbstractWhen two moving objects are presented in perfect alignment, but are not visible for the same...
AbstractIn the flash-lag effect (FLE) a moving object is perceived ahead of a stationary stimulus fl...
History and theory of flash-lag: past, present, and future gerrit w. maus, beena khurana, and romi n...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect refers to the phenomenon where a flash of a stationary stimulus present...