The perceived position of a flash aligned with a moving object usually lags behind that object. This illusion is well known as the flash-lag effect. Interestingly, head rotation alone can also induce a flash-lag effect. To date, the underlying mechanism for the head-rotation-induced flash-lag effect remains unclear. Using a virtual reality approach, we examined the contribution of vestibular signal processing in producing the effect. We found that vestibular, rather than kinesthetic, signal processing is critical for this type of flash-lag effect to occur. When head rotation induced a stationary reference stimulus in space to move on the retina, we observed a flash-lead effect relative to the reference (or a flash-lag effect relative to the...
International audienceDue to its inherent neural delays, the visual system has an outdated access to...
AbstractA brief flash presented physically aligned with a moving stimulus is perceived to lag behind...
AbstractTo achieve perceptual alignment between a flashed target and a moving one, subjects typicall...
The perceived position of a flash aligned with a moving object usually lags behind that object. This...
As a prominent illusion. the motion aftereffect (MAE) has traditionally been considered a visual phe...
To achieve perceptual alignment between a flashed target and a moving one, subjects typically requir...
Motion from periphery to central vision (foveopetal motion) causes a greater flash-lag effect than m...
AbstractA flash that is presented aligned with a moving stimulus appears to lag behind the position ...
AbstractA moving object is perceived to lie beyond a static object presented at the same time at the...
ABSTRACT—The flash-lag effect, inwhich amoving object is perceived ahead of a colocalized flash, has...
The flash-lag effect is a visual misperception of a position of a flash relative to that of a moving...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect is a robust visual illusion in which a flash appears to spatially lag a...
The tendency for briefly flashed stimuli to appear to lag behind the spatial position of physically ...
AbstractThe tendency for briefly flashed stimuli to appear to lag behind the spatial position of phy...
Neural processing of sensory input in the brain takes time, and for that reason our awareness of vis...
International audienceDue to its inherent neural delays, the visual system has an outdated access to...
AbstractA brief flash presented physically aligned with a moving stimulus is perceived to lag behind...
AbstractTo achieve perceptual alignment between a flashed target and a moving one, subjects typicall...
The perceived position of a flash aligned with a moving object usually lags behind that object. This...
As a prominent illusion. the motion aftereffect (MAE) has traditionally been considered a visual phe...
To achieve perceptual alignment between a flashed target and a moving one, subjects typically requir...
Motion from periphery to central vision (foveopetal motion) causes a greater flash-lag effect than m...
AbstractA flash that is presented aligned with a moving stimulus appears to lag behind the position ...
AbstractA moving object is perceived to lie beyond a static object presented at the same time at the...
ABSTRACT—The flash-lag effect, inwhich amoving object is perceived ahead of a colocalized flash, has...
The flash-lag effect is a visual misperception of a position of a flash relative to that of a moving...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect is a robust visual illusion in which a flash appears to spatially lag a...
The tendency for briefly flashed stimuli to appear to lag behind the spatial position of physically ...
AbstractThe tendency for briefly flashed stimuli to appear to lag behind the spatial position of phy...
Neural processing of sensory input in the brain takes time, and for that reason our awareness of vis...
International audienceDue to its inherent neural delays, the visual system has an outdated access to...
AbstractA brief flash presented physically aligned with a moving stimulus is perceived to lag behind...
AbstractTo achieve perceptual alignment between a flashed target and a moving one, subjects typicall...