Our understanding of how the visual system processes motion transparency, the phenomenon by which multiple directions of motion are perceived to coexist in the same spatial region, has grown considerably in the past decade. There is compelling evidence that the process is driven by global-motion mechanisms. Consequently, although transparently moving surfaces are readily segmented over an extended space, the visual system cannot separate two motion signals that coexist in the same local region. A related issue is whether the visual system can detect transparently moving surfaces simultaneously or whether the component signals encounter a serial 'bottleneck' during their processing. Our initial results show that, at sufficiently short stimul...
We have examined the ability of observers to parse bimodal local-motion distributions into two globa...
Transparency perception often occurs when objects within the visual scene partially occlude each oth...
AbstractWe have examined the ability of observers to parse bimodal local-motion distributions into t...
Our understanding of how the visual system processes motion transparency, the phenomenon by which mu...
AbstractThe simultaneous perception of multiple motion components within the same region in the visu...
Our visual system can solve the difficult problem of repre-senting multiple motions in the same part...
In daily life our visual system is bombarded with motion information. We see cars driving by, flocks...
Motion transparency provides a challenging test case for our understanding of how visual motion, and...
When transparent motion is defined purely by direction differences, observers fail to detect more th...
AbstractA number of studies were conducted to determine how many transparent motion signals observer...
AbstractMotion transparency provides a challenging test case for our understanding of how visual mot...
AbstractHuman observers can extract a given motion direction from sets of random dots moving simulta...
this article some other nontransparent displays that cannot be explained this way. Motion transparen...
When we look at two overlapping random-dot patterns moving toward different directions, we perceive ...
AbstractWhen transparent motion is defined purely by direction differences, no more than two signal ...
We have examined the ability of observers to parse bimodal local-motion distributions into two globa...
Transparency perception often occurs when objects within the visual scene partially occlude each oth...
AbstractWe have examined the ability of observers to parse bimodal local-motion distributions into t...
Our understanding of how the visual system processes motion transparency, the phenomenon by which mu...
AbstractThe simultaneous perception of multiple motion components within the same region in the visu...
Our visual system can solve the difficult problem of repre-senting multiple motions in the same part...
In daily life our visual system is bombarded with motion information. We see cars driving by, flocks...
Motion transparency provides a challenging test case for our understanding of how visual motion, and...
When transparent motion is defined purely by direction differences, observers fail to detect more th...
AbstractA number of studies were conducted to determine how many transparent motion signals observer...
AbstractMotion transparency provides a challenging test case for our understanding of how visual mot...
AbstractHuman observers can extract a given motion direction from sets of random dots moving simulta...
this article some other nontransparent displays that cannot be explained this way. Motion transparen...
When we look at two overlapping random-dot patterns moving toward different directions, we perceive ...
AbstractWhen transparent motion is defined purely by direction differences, no more than two signal ...
We have examined the ability of observers to parse bimodal local-motion distributions into two globa...
Transparency perception often occurs when objects within the visual scene partially occlude each oth...
AbstractWe have examined the ability of observers to parse bimodal local-motion distributions into t...