Motion-induced blindness is a striking phenomenon in which salient static visual stimuli "disappear" for seconds at a time in the presence of specific moving patterns. Here we investigate whether the phenomenon is due to surface completion of the moving patterns. Stereo-depth information was added to the motion stimulus to create depth ordering between the static and moving components of the display. Depth ordering consistent with the perceptual occlusion of the static elements increased motion-induced blindness whereas placing the moving components behind the static elements decreased the static dot disappearance. In a second experiment we used an induced surface stimulus configuration to drive the motion-induced blindness phenom...
Motion-induced blindness (MIB) and binocular rivalry (BR) are examples of multistable phenomena ...
We obtained (apparently) linear responses to luminance from three special displays of apparent motio...
Perceptual-Wlling-in (PFI) and motion-induced-blindness (MIB) are two phenomena of temporary blindne...
Motion-induced blindness is a striking phenomenon in which salient static visual stimuli "disappear"...
AbstractMotion-induced blindness is a striking phenomenon in which salient static visual stimuli “di...
Purpose: Motion-induced blindness is a striking phenomenon where salient static visual stimuli “disa...
Motion-induced blindness (MIB) describes the occasional disappearance of salient visual objects in t...
After prolonged viewing, a static target among moving non-targets is perceived to repeatedly disappe...
AbstractAfter prolonged viewing, a static target among moving non-targets is perceived to repeatedly...
SummaryIn motion-induced blindness (MIB), persistent static targets intermittently disappear when pr...
Motion-induced blindness occurs when an unchanging part of the visual field that is stationary relat...
Visual disappearance illusions – such as motion-induced blindness (MIB)- are commonly used to study ...
AbstractPerceptual-filling-in (PFI) and motion-induced-blindness (MIB) are two phenomena of temporar...
Visual motion can be represented in terms of the dynamic visual features in the retinal image or in ...
It is well-known that the human visual system can reconstruct depth from simple random-dot displays ...
Motion-induced blindness (MIB) and binocular rivalry (BR) are examples of multistable phenomena ...
We obtained (apparently) linear responses to luminance from three special displays of apparent motio...
Perceptual-Wlling-in (PFI) and motion-induced-blindness (MIB) are two phenomena of temporary blindne...
Motion-induced blindness is a striking phenomenon in which salient static visual stimuli "disappear"...
AbstractMotion-induced blindness is a striking phenomenon in which salient static visual stimuli “di...
Purpose: Motion-induced blindness is a striking phenomenon where salient static visual stimuli “disa...
Motion-induced blindness (MIB) describes the occasional disappearance of salient visual objects in t...
After prolonged viewing, a static target among moving non-targets is perceived to repeatedly disappe...
AbstractAfter prolonged viewing, a static target among moving non-targets is perceived to repeatedly...
SummaryIn motion-induced blindness (MIB), persistent static targets intermittently disappear when pr...
Motion-induced blindness occurs when an unchanging part of the visual field that is stationary relat...
Visual disappearance illusions – such as motion-induced blindness (MIB)- are commonly used to study ...
AbstractPerceptual-filling-in (PFI) and motion-induced-blindness (MIB) are two phenomena of temporar...
Visual motion can be represented in terms of the dynamic visual features in the retinal image or in ...
It is well-known that the human visual system can reconstruct depth from simple random-dot displays ...
Motion-induced blindness (MIB) and binocular rivalry (BR) are examples of multistable phenomena ...
We obtained (apparently) linear responses to luminance from three special displays of apparent motio...
Perceptual-Wlling-in (PFI) and motion-induced-blindness (MIB) are two phenomena of temporary blindne...