In daily life our visual system is bombarded with motion information. We see cars driving by, flocks of birds flying in the sky, clouds passing behind trees that are dancing in the wind. Vision science has a good understanding of the first stage of visual motion processing, that is, the mechanism underlying the detection of local motions. Currently, research is focused on the processes that occur beyond the first stage. At this level, local motions have to be integrated to form objects, define the boundaries between them, construct surfaces and so on. An interesting, if complicated case is known as motion transparency: the situation in which two overlapping surfaces move transparently over each other. In that case two motions have to be ass...
It is well-known that the human visual system can reconstruct depth from simple random-dot displays ...
A model of human motion perception is presented. The model contains two stages of direction selectiv...
When we look at two overlapping random-dot patterns moving toward different directions, we perceive ...
In daily life our visual system is bombarded with motion information. We see cars driving by, flocks...
In daily life our visual system is bombarded with motion information. We see cars driving by, flocks...
In daily life our visual system is bombarded with motion information. We see cars driving by, flocks...
Our understanding of how the visual system processes motion transparency, the phenomenon by which mu...
Our understanding of how the visual system processes motion transparency, the phenomenon by which mu...
this article some other nontransparent displays that cannot be explained this way. Motion transparen...
Our visual system can solve the difficult problem of repre-senting multiple motions in the same part...
AbstractThe simultaneous perception of multiple motion components within the same region in the visu...
Transparent motion is perceived when multiple motions are presented in the same part of visual space...
A model of human motion perception is presented. The model contains two stages of direction selectiv...
It is well-known that the human visual system can reconstruct depth from simple random-dot displays ...
A model of human motion perception is presented. The model contains two stages of direction selectiv...
It is well-known that the human visual system can reconstruct depth from simple random-dot displays ...
A model of human motion perception is presented. The model contains two stages of direction selectiv...
When we look at two overlapping random-dot patterns moving toward different directions, we perceive ...
In daily life our visual system is bombarded with motion information. We see cars driving by, flocks...
In daily life our visual system is bombarded with motion information. We see cars driving by, flocks...
In daily life our visual system is bombarded with motion information. We see cars driving by, flocks...
Our understanding of how the visual system processes motion transparency, the phenomenon by which mu...
Our understanding of how the visual system processes motion transparency, the phenomenon by which mu...
this article some other nontransparent displays that cannot be explained this way. Motion transparen...
Our visual system can solve the difficult problem of repre-senting multiple motions in the same part...
AbstractThe simultaneous perception of multiple motion components within the same region in the visu...
Transparent motion is perceived when multiple motions are presented in the same part of visual space...
A model of human motion perception is presented. The model contains two stages of direction selectiv...
It is well-known that the human visual system can reconstruct depth from simple random-dot displays ...
A model of human motion perception is presented. The model contains two stages of direction selectiv...
It is well-known that the human visual system can reconstruct depth from simple random-dot displays ...
A model of human motion perception is presented. The model contains two stages of direction selectiv...
When we look at two overlapping random-dot patterns moving toward different directions, we perceive ...