Area MT in extrastriate visual cortex is widely believed to be responsible for the perception of object speed. Recent physiological data show that many cells in macaque visual area MT change their speed preferences with a change in stimulus spatial frequency (N. J. Priebe, C. R. Cassanello, & S. G. Lisberger, 2003) and that this effect can accurately predict the dependence of perceived speed on spatial frequency demonstrated in a related psychophysical study (N. J. Priebe & S. G. Lisberger, 2004). For more complex compound gratings and high contrast stimuli, MT cell speed preferences show sharper tuning and less dependence on spatial frequency (Priebe et al., 2003), allowing us to predict that such stimuli should produce speed percepts that...
AbstractWe have previously shown that contrast affects speed perception, with lower-contrast, drifti...
noIn this report, we evaluate the role of visual areas responsive to motion in the human brain in th...
AbstractWe address a surprising result in a previous study of speed discrimination with multiple mov...
Manipulations of the contrast or spatial frequency (SF) of a simple sine-wave grating pattern can in...
A car driving through the fog appears tomovemore slowly than one driving on a clear and sunny day. I...
Variations of perceived speed with spatial frequency (SF), temporal frequency (TF), and contrast hav...
Variations of perceived speed with spatial frequency (SF), temporal frequency (TF), and contrast hav...
The visual world is processed in the brain as a series of characteristics, where the information is ...
Perception of dynamic scenes in our environment results from the evaluation of visual features such ...
Interacting with the natural environment leads to complex stimulations of our senses. Here we focus ...
Visual motion on the macaque retina is processed by direction- and speed-selective neurons in extras...
The perception of speed is susceptible to manipulations of image contrast, both for simple sine wave...
he prevailing view of motion detection in human vision is that the retinal image is convolved with e...
We have recently shown that stimulus acceleration affects subsequent preferred speed and tuning widt...
The human middle temporal complex (hMT+) has a crucial biological relevance for the processing and d...
AbstractWe have previously shown that contrast affects speed perception, with lower-contrast, drifti...
noIn this report, we evaluate the role of visual areas responsive to motion in the human brain in th...
AbstractWe address a surprising result in a previous study of speed discrimination with multiple mov...
Manipulations of the contrast or spatial frequency (SF) of a simple sine-wave grating pattern can in...
A car driving through the fog appears tomovemore slowly than one driving on a clear and sunny day. I...
Variations of perceived speed with spatial frequency (SF), temporal frequency (TF), and contrast hav...
Variations of perceived speed with spatial frequency (SF), temporal frequency (TF), and contrast hav...
The visual world is processed in the brain as a series of characteristics, where the information is ...
Perception of dynamic scenes in our environment results from the evaluation of visual features such ...
Interacting with the natural environment leads to complex stimulations of our senses. Here we focus ...
Visual motion on the macaque retina is processed by direction- and speed-selective neurons in extras...
The perception of speed is susceptible to manipulations of image contrast, both for simple sine wave...
he prevailing view of motion detection in human vision is that the retinal image is convolved with e...
We have recently shown that stimulus acceleration affects subsequent preferred speed and tuning widt...
The human middle temporal complex (hMT+) has a crucial biological relevance for the processing and d...
AbstractWe have previously shown that contrast affects speed perception, with lower-contrast, drifti...
noIn this report, we evaluate the role of visual areas responsive to motion in the human brain in th...
AbstractWe address a surprising result in a previous study of speed discrimination with multiple mov...