AbstractConverging psychophysical and electrophysiological evidence suggests that first-order (luminance-defined) complex motion types i.e., radial and rotational motion, are processed by specialized extrastriate motion mechanisms. We ask whether radial and rotational second-order (texture-defined) motion patterns are processed in a similar manner. The motion sensitivity to translating, radiating and rotating motion patterns of both first-order (luminance-modulated noise) and second-order (contrast-modulated noise) were measured for patterns presented at four different exposure durations (106, 240, 500 and 750 ms). No significant difference in motion sensitivity was found across motion type for the first-order motion class across exposure d...
© 2001 Optical Society of AmericaMotion-defined motion can play a special role in the discussion of ...
AbstractRecent neurological studies of selective impairments in first and second-order motion proces...
AbstractIt has become apparent from recent work that the spatial frequency and orientation content o...
AbstractConverging psychophysical and electrophysiological evidence suggests that first-order (lumin...
AbstractOptic flow—large-field rotational and radial motion—is processed as efficiently as translati...
AbstractMotion detection can be achieved either with mechanisms sensitive to a target's velocity, or...
The existence of a second-order motion system distinct from both the first-order and feature trackin...
AbstractA contrast-modulated (CM) pattern is formed when a modulating or envelope function imposes l...
The movement of luminance-defined targets can be easily extracted by elementary motion detectors (EM...
There is considerable evidence that second-order motion, such as motion consisting of a drifting con...
Fast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous test pat...
After prolonged adaptation to a moving pattern, a subsequently presented static or dynamic test patt...
Fast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous test pat...
AbstractA static or counterphase (target) grating surrounded by drifting (inducer) gratings is perce...
AbstractA series of experiments was conducted to clarify the distinction between motion aftereffects...
© 2001 Optical Society of AmericaMotion-defined motion can play a special role in the discussion of ...
AbstractRecent neurological studies of selective impairments in first and second-order motion proces...
AbstractIt has become apparent from recent work that the spatial frequency and orientation content o...
AbstractConverging psychophysical and electrophysiological evidence suggests that first-order (lumin...
AbstractOptic flow—large-field rotational and radial motion—is processed as efficiently as translati...
AbstractMotion detection can be achieved either with mechanisms sensitive to a target's velocity, or...
The existence of a second-order motion system distinct from both the first-order and feature trackin...
AbstractA contrast-modulated (CM) pattern is formed when a modulating or envelope function imposes l...
The movement of luminance-defined targets can be easily extracted by elementary motion detectors (EM...
There is considerable evidence that second-order motion, such as motion consisting of a drifting con...
Fast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous test pat...
After prolonged adaptation to a moving pattern, a subsequently presented static or dynamic test patt...
Fast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous test pat...
AbstractA static or counterphase (target) grating surrounded by drifting (inducer) gratings is perce...
AbstractA series of experiments was conducted to clarify the distinction between motion aftereffects...
© 2001 Optical Society of AmericaMotion-defined motion can play a special role in the discussion of ...
AbstractRecent neurological studies of selective impairments in first and second-order motion proces...
AbstractIt has become apparent from recent work that the spatial frequency and orientation content o...