Two stereoscopic cues that underlie the perception of motion-in-depth (MID) are changes in retinal disparity over time (CD) and interocular velocity differences (IOVD). These cues have independent spatiotemporal sensitivity profiles, depend upon different low-level stimulus properties, and are potentially processed along separate cortical pathways. Here, we ask whether these MID cues code for different motion directions: do they give rise to discriminable patterns of neural signals, and is there evidence for their convergence onto a single “motion-in-depth” pathway? To answer this, we use a decoding algorithm to test whether, and when, patterns of electroencephalogram (EEG) signals measured from across the full scalp, generated in response ...
Howard (2012) published very similar studies using the motion aftereffect to probe the way in which ...
Motion-in-depth can be detected by using two different types of binocular cues: change of disparity ...
Motion-in-depth can be detected by using two different types of binocular cues: change of disparity ...
Two stereoscopic cues that underlie the perception of motion-in-depth (MID) are changes in retinal d...
MH was supported by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program under the Mari...
Motion in depth (MID) can be cued by high-resolution changes in binocular disparity over time (CD), ...
YesMotion in depth (MID) can be cued by high-resolution changes in binocular disparity over time (CD...
AbstractChanging disparity (CD) and interocular velocity difference (IOVD) are two possible mechanis...
AbstractChanging disparity (CD) and interocular velocity difference (IOVD) are two possible mechanis...
This work was supported by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council Grants BB/M002...
AbstractThe visual system can determine motion and depth from ambiguous information contained in ima...
Motion and binocular disparity are two features in our environment that share a common correspondenc...
Motion and binocular disparity are two features in our environment that share a common correspondenc...
Motion in depth (MID) can be cued by high-resolution changes in binocular disparity over time (CD), ...
AbstractAn object moving in depth produces retinal images that change in position over time by diffe...
Howard (2012) published very similar studies using the motion aftereffect to probe the way in which ...
Motion-in-depth can be detected by using two different types of binocular cues: change of disparity ...
Motion-in-depth can be detected by using two different types of binocular cues: change of disparity ...
Two stereoscopic cues that underlie the perception of motion-in-depth (MID) are changes in retinal d...
MH was supported by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Program under the Mari...
Motion in depth (MID) can be cued by high-resolution changes in binocular disparity over time (CD), ...
YesMotion in depth (MID) can be cued by high-resolution changes in binocular disparity over time (CD...
AbstractChanging disparity (CD) and interocular velocity difference (IOVD) are two possible mechanis...
AbstractChanging disparity (CD) and interocular velocity difference (IOVD) are two possible mechanis...
This work was supported by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council Grants BB/M002...
AbstractThe visual system can determine motion and depth from ambiguous information contained in ima...
Motion and binocular disparity are two features in our environment that share a common correspondenc...
Motion and binocular disparity are two features in our environment that share a common correspondenc...
Motion in depth (MID) can be cued by high-resolution changes in binocular disparity over time (CD), ...
AbstractAn object moving in depth produces retinal images that change in position over time by diffe...
Howard (2012) published very similar studies using the motion aftereffect to probe the way in which ...
Motion-in-depth can be detected by using two different types of binocular cues: change of disparity ...
Motion-in-depth can be detected by using two different types of binocular cues: change of disparity ...