Motion perception involves the processing of velocity signals through several hierarchical stages of the visual cortex. To better understand this process, a number of studies have sought to localise the neural substrates of two misperceptions of motion direction, the direction illusion (DI) and the direction aftereffect (DAE). These studies have produced contradictory evidence as to the hierarchical order of the processing stages from which the respective phenomena arise. We have used a simple stimulus configuration to further investigate the sequential order of processes giving rise to the DI and DAE. To this end, we measured the two phenomena invoked in combination, and also manually parsed this combined effect into its two constituents b...
THE motion after-effect occurs after prolonged viewing of motion; a subsequent stationary scene is p...
THE motion after-effect occurs after prolonged viewing of motion; a subsequent stationary scene is p...
The motion after-effect occurs after prolonged viewing of motion; a subsequent stationary scene is p...
There are many examples of one visual stimulus affecting the perception of another. Such effects occ...
Direction repulsion is the illusory expansion of the angle between two directions of motion, and may...
AbstractThe processing of motion information by the visual system can be decomposed into two general...
Neural adaptation and inhibition are pervasive characteristics of the primate brain, and are probabl...
Prior experience influences visual perception. For example, extended viewing of a moving stimulus re...
Prior experience influences visual perception. For example, extended viewing of a moving stimulus re...
Prior experience influences visual perception. For example, extended viewing of a moving stimulus re...
Neural adaptation and inhibition are pervasive characteristics of the primate brain and are probably...
AbstractDirection repulsion is the illusory expansion of the angle between two directions of motion,...
Research into illusions and after effects of motion direction (“direction repulsion”) has produced c...
The motion after-effect occurs after prolonged viewing of motion; a subsequent stationary scene is p...
The motion after-effect occurs after prolonged viewing of motion; a subsequent stationary scene is p...
THE motion after-effect occurs after prolonged viewing of motion; a subsequent stationary scene is p...
THE motion after-effect occurs after prolonged viewing of motion; a subsequent stationary scene is p...
The motion after-effect occurs after prolonged viewing of motion; a subsequent stationary scene is p...
There are many examples of one visual stimulus affecting the perception of another. Such effects occ...
Direction repulsion is the illusory expansion of the angle between two directions of motion, and may...
AbstractThe processing of motion information by the visual system can be decomposed into two general...
Neural adaptation and inhibition are pervasive characteristics of the primate brain, and are probabl...
Prior experience influences visual perception. For example, extended viewing of a moving stimulus re...
Prior experience influences visual perception. For example, extended viewing of a moving stimulus re...
Prior experience influences visual perception. For example, extended viewing of a moving stimulus re...
Neural adaptation and inhibition are pervasive characteristics of the primate brain and are probably...
AbstractDirection repulsion is the illusory expansion of the angle between two directions of motion,...
Research into illusions and after effects of motion direction (“direction repulsion”) has produced c...
The motion after-effect occurs after prolonged viewing of motion; a subsequent stationary scene is p...
The motion after-effect occurs after prolonged viewing of motion; a subsequent stationary scene is p...
THE motion after-effect occurs after prolonged viewing of motion; a subsequent stationary scene is p...
THE motion after-effect occurs after prolonged viewing of motion; a subsequent stationary scene is p...
The motion after-effect occurs after prolonged viewing of motion; a subsequent stationary scene is p...