International audienceWe used biased random-dot dynamic test stimuli to measure the strength of the motion aftereffect (MAE) to evaluate the usefulness of this technique as a measure of motion adaptation strength. The stimuli consisted of noise dots whose individual directions were random and of signal dots moving in a unique direction. All dots moved at the same speed. For each condition, the nulling percentage (percentage of signal dots needed to perceptually null the MAE) was scaled with respect to the coherence threshold (percentage needed to perceive the coherent motion of signal dots without prior adaptation). The increase of these scaled values with the density of dots in the test stimulus suggests that MAE strength is underestimated...
We describe an unusual motion aftereffect that probes early stages of motion coding psychophysically...
AbstractWe examined the effects of adaptation and test contrasts on the duration of two types of mot...
Prolonged exposure (adaptation) to a stimulus drifting at a constant speed can bias the perceived sp...
NoWe used biased random-dot dynamic test stimuli to measure the strength of the motion aftereffect (...
Strength of the motion aftereffect (MAE) is most often quantified by its duration, a high-variance a...
A visual illusion known as the motion aftereffect is considered to be the perceptual manifestation o...
AbstractOne of the many interesting questions in motion aftereffect (MAE) research is concerned with...
Subsecond adaptation to directional motion can induce a rapid form of motion after-effect (rMAE). Un...
Item does not contain fulltextIt is well established that motion aftereffects (MAEs) can show intero...
AbstractUsing a speed-matching task, we measured the speed tuning of the dynamic motion aftereffect ...
It is well established that motion aftereffects (MAEs) can show interocular transfer (IOT); that is,...
AbstractWhen a stimulus of equally spaced parallel lines is displaced slightly in a direction perpen...
AbstractThe motion aftereffect (MAE) is an illusory drift of a physically stationary pattern induced...
The motion aftereffect (MAE) is an illusory drift of a physically stationary pattern induced by prol...
AbstractAdaptation to orthogonal transparent patterns drifting at the same speed produces a unidirec...
We describe an unusual motion aftereffect that probes early stages of motion coding psychophysically...
AbstractWe examined the effects of adaptation and test contrasts on the duration of two types of mot...
Prolonged exposure (adaptation) to a stimulus drifting at a constant speed can bias the perceived sp...
NoWe used biased random-dot dynamic test stimuli to measure the strength of the motion aftereffect (...
Strength of the motion aftereffect (MAE) is most often quantified by its duration, a high-variance a...
A visual illusion known as the motion aftereffect is considered to be the perceptual manifestation o...
AbstractOne of the many interesting questions in motion aftereffect (MAE) research is concerned with...
Subsecond adaptation to directional motion can induce a rapid form of motion after-effect (rMAE). Un...
Item does not contain fulltextIt is well established that motion aftereffects (MAEs) can show intero...
AbstractUsing a speed-matching task, we measured the speed tuning of the dynamic motion aftereffect ...
It is well established that motion aftereffects (MAEs) can show interocular transfer (IOT); that is,...
AbstractWhen a stimulus of equally spaced parallel lines is displaced slightly in a direction perpen...
AbstractThe motion aftereffect (MAE) is an illusory drift of a physically stationary pattern induced...
The motion aftereffect (MAE) is an illusory drift of a physically stationary pattern induced by prol...
AbstractAdaptation to orthogonal transparent patterns drifting at the same speed produces a unidirec...
We describe an unusual motion aftereffect that probes early stages of motion coding psychophysically...
AbstractWe examined the effects of adaptation and test contrasts on the duration of two types of mot...
Prolonged exposure (adaptation) to a stimulus drifting at a constant speed can bias the perceived sp...