none5noA growing amount of evidence suggests that viewing a photograph depicting motion activates the same direction-selective neurons involved in the perception of real motion. It has been shown that prolonged exposure (adaptation) to photographs depicting directional motion can induce motion adaptation and consequently motion aftereffect. The present study investigated whether adapting to photographs depicting humans, animals, and vehicles that move leftward or rightward also generates a positional aftereffect (the motion-induced position shift - MIPS), in which the perceived spatial position of a target pattern is shifted in the opposite direction to that of adaptation. Results showed that adapting to still photographs depicting objects ...
AbstractThe processing of motion information by the visual system can be decomposed into two general...
AbstractSimultaneously adapting to retinal motion and non-collinear pursuit eye movement produces a ...
AbstractActivation of the human visual motion area V5/MT was previously thought to be the basis of t...
AbstractA growing amount of evidence suggests that viewing a photograph depicting motion activates t...
A growing amount of evidence suggests that viewing a photograph depicting motion activates the same ...
AbstractAfter an observer adapts to a moving stimulus, texture within a stationary stimulus is perce...
NoAfter an observer adapts to a moving stimulus, texture within a stationary stimulus is perceived t...
Viewing static pictures of running humans evokes neural activity in the dorsal motion-sensitive cort...
Viewing static pictures of running humans evokes neural activity in the dorsal motion-sensitive cort...
Accurately perceiving the locations of objects is essential for successfully interacting with our en...
Prolonged exposure (adaptation) to a stimulus drifting at a constant speed can bias the perceived sp...
Image motion is initially detected locally. Local motion signals are then integrated across space in...
AbstractWhere do we perceive an object to be when it is moving? Nijhawan [1] has reported that if a ...
thoug g a s the lar di addre effect. We found that following prolonged imagery of motion in one dire...
Illusory position shifts induced by motion suggest that motion processing can interfere with perceiv...
AbstractThe processing of motion information by the visual system can be decomposed into two general...
AbstractSimultaneously adapting to retinal motion and non-collinear pursuit eye movement produces a ...
AbstractActivation of the human visual motion area V5/MT was previously thought to be the basis of t...
AbstractA growing amount of evidence suggests that viewing a photograph depicting motion activates t...
A growing amount of evidence suggests that viewing a photograph depicting motion activates the same ...
AbstractAfter an observer adapts to a moving stimulus, texture within a stationary stimulus is perce...
NoAfter an observer adapts to a moving stimulus, texture within a stationary stimulus is perceived t...
Viewing static pictures of running humans evokes neural activity in the dorsal motion-sensitive cort...
Viewing static pictures of running humans evokes neural activity in the dorsal motion-sensitive cort...
Accurately perceiving the locations of objects is essential for successfully interacting with our en...
Prolonged exposure (adaptation) to a stimulus drifting at a constant speed can bias the perceived sp...
Image motion is initially detected locally. Local motion signals are then integrated across space in...
AbstractWhere do we perceive an object to be when it is moving? Nijhawan [1] has reported that if a ...
thoug g a s the lar di addre effect. We found that following prolonged imagery of motion in one dire...
Illusory position shifts induced by motion suggest that motion processing can interfere with perceiv...
AbstractThe processing of motion information by the visual system can be decomposed into two general...
AbstractSimultaneously adapting to retinal motion and non-collinear pursuit eye movement produces a ...
AbstractActivation of the human visual motion area V5/MT was previously thought to be the basis of t...