In Li and Atick's [1, 2] theory of efficient stereo coding, the two eyes' signals are transformed into uncorrelated binocular summation and difference signals, and gain control is applied to the summation and differencing channels to optimize their sensitivities. In natural vision, the optimal channel sensitivities vary from moment to moment, depending on the strengths of the summation and difference signals; these channels should therefore be separately adaptable, whereby a channel's sensitivity is reduced following overexposure to adaptation stimuli that selectively stimulate that channel. This predicts a remarkable effect of binocular adaptation on perceived direction of a dichoptic motion stimulus [3]. For this stimulus, the summation a...
AbstractWhen counterphase spatio-temporal flicker is presented to the left and right eye continuous ...
When counterphase spatio-temporal flicker is presented to the left and right eye continuous directio...
AbstractThe motion after-effect (MAE) can be elicited by adapting observers to global motion of rand...
In Li and Atick's [1, 2] theory of efficient stereo coding, the two eyes' signals are transformed in...
In Li and Atick's [1, 2] theory of efficient stereo coding, the two eyes' signals are transformed in...
SummaryIn Li and Atick's [1, 2] theory of efficient stereo coding, the two eyes' signals are transfo...
Li and Atick (1994) presented a theory of efficient binocular encoding in which the two eyes’ signal...
The brain is bombarded with a continuous stream of sensory information, but biological limitations o...
AbstractThis study employed a selective adaptation paradigm and investigated thresholds for directio...
AbstractInteractions between motion sensors tuned to the same and to opposite directions were probed...
Across four experiments, this study investigated direction-specific adaptation and simultaneous cont...
AbstractThe processing of motion information by the visual system can be decomposed into two general...
We present a novel face adaptation paradigm that follows from Li and Atick’s (1994) theory of effici...
Biological visual systems continuously optimize themselves to the prevailing image statistics, which...
AbstractAdaptation was studied in a paradigm in which the adapting stimulus was a variably biased ve...
AbstractWhen counterphase spatio-temporal flicker is presented to the left and right eye continuous ...
When counterphase spatio-temporal flicker is presented to the left and right eye continuous directio...
AbstractThe motion after-effect (MAE) can be elicited by adapting observers to global motion of rand...
In Li and Atick's [1, 2] theory of efficient stereo coding, the two eyes' signals are transformed in...
In Li and Atick's [1, 2] theory of efficient stereo coding, the two eyes' signals are transformed in...
SummaryIn Li and Atick's [1, 2] theory of efficient stereo coding, the two eyes' signals are transfo...
Li and Atick (1994) presented a theory of efficient binocular encoding in which the two eyes’ signal...
The brain is bombarded with a continuous stream of sensory information, but biological limitations o...
AbstractThis study employed a selective adaptation paradigm and investigated thresholds for directio...
AbstractInteractions between motion sensors tuned to the same and to opposite directions were probed...
Across four experiments, this study investigated direction-specific adaptation and simultaneous cont...
AbstractThe processing of motion information by the visual system can be decomposed into two general...
We present a novel face adaptation paradigm that follows from Li and Atick’s (1994) theory of effici...
Biological visual systems continuously optimize themselves to the prevailing image statistics, which...
AbstractAdaptation was studied in a paradigm in which the adapting stimulus was a variably biased ve...
AbstractWhen counterphase spatio-temporal flicker is presented to the left and right eye continuous ...
When counterphase spatio-temporal flicker is presented to the left and right eye continuous directio...
AbstractThe motion after-effect (MAE) can be elicited by adapting observers to global motion of rand...