AbstractOcular following responses (OFRs) are the initial tracking eye movements that can be elicited at ultra-short latency by sudden motion of a textured pattern. A recent study used motion stimuli consisting of two large coextensive sine-wave gratings with the same orientation but different spatial frequency and moving in ¼-wavelength steps in the same or opposite directions: when the two gratings differed in contrast by more than about an octave then the one with the higher contrast completely dominated the OFR and the one with lower contrast lost its influence as though suppressed [Sheliga, B. M., Kodaka, Y., FitzGibbon, E. J., & Miles, F. A. (2006). Human ocular following initiated by competing image motions: Evidence for a winner-tak...
AbstractOcular following responses (OFRs) are the initial tracking eye movements elicited at ultra-s...
AbstractPsychophysical evidence indicates that visual motion can be sensed by low-level (energy-base...
AbstractTransient apparent-motion stimuli, consisting of single 1/4-wavelength steps applied to squa...
AbstractOcular following responses (OFRs) are the initial tracking eye movements that can be elicite...
AbstractOcular following responses (OFRs) are the initial tracking eye movements that can be elicite...
AbstractThe initial ocular following responses (OFRs) elicited by 1/4-wavelength steps applied to th...
AbstractThe initial ocular following responses (OFRs) elicited by 1/4-wavelength steps applied to th...
AbstractOcular following responses (OFRs) are the initial tracking eye movements elicited at ultra-s...
AbstractUsing sinusoidal gratings we show that an increase in stimulus size confined to the dimensio...
AbstractOcular following responses (OFRs) are the initial tracking eye movements that can be elicite...
AbstractRadial optic flow applied to large random dot patterns is known to elicit horizontal vergenc...
Ocular following responses (OFRs) are tracking eye movements elicited at ultrashort latency by the s...
AbstractVisual motion is sensed by low-level (energy-based) and high-level (feature-based) mechanism...
AbstractUsing sinusoidal gratings we show that an increase in stimulus size confined to the dimensio...
AbstractVergence eye movements were elicited in human subjects at short latencies (∼70ms) by applyin...
AbstractOcular following responses (OFRs) are the initial tracking eye movements elicited at ultra-s...
AbstractPsychophysical evidence indicates that visual motion can be sensed by low-level (energy-base...
AbstractTransient apparent-motion stimuli, consisting of single 1/4-wavelength steps applied to squa...
AbstractOcular following responses (OFRs) are the initial tracking eye movements that can be elicite...
AbstractOcular following responses (OFRs) are the initial tracking eye movements that can be elicite...
AbstractThe initial ocular following responses (OFRs) elicited by 1/4-wavelength steps applied to th...
AbstractThe initial ocular following responses (OFRs) elicited by 1/4-wavelength steps applied to th...
AbstractOcular following responses (OFRs) are the initial tracking eye movements elicited at ultra-s...
AbstractUsing sinusoidal gratings we show that an increase in stimulus size confined to the dimensio...
AbstractOcular following responses (OFRs) are the initial tracking eye movements that can be elicite...
AbstractRadial optic flow applied to large random dot patterns is known to elicit horizontal vergenc...
Ocular following responses (OFRs) are tracking eye movements elicited at ultrashort latency by the s...
AbstractVisual motion is sensed by low-level (energy-based) and high-level (feature-based) mechanism...
AbstractUsing sinusoidal gratings we show that an increase in stimulus size confined to the dimensio...
AbstractVergence eye movements were elicited in human subjects at short latencies (∼70ms) by applyin...
AbstractOcular following responses (OFRs) are the initial tracking eye movements elicited at ultra-s...
AbstractPsychophysical evidence indicates that visual motion can be sensed by low-level (energy-base...
AbstractTransient apparent-motion stimuli, consisting of single 1/4-wavelength steps applied to squa...