AbstractThe representation modification hypothesis of perceptual learning attributes the practice-induced improvements in sensitivity and/or discriminability to changes in the early visual areas. We used motion aftereffects (MAE) to probe the representations of motion direction. In two experiments, four practice sessions on a fine direction-discrimination task caused large stimulus-specific improvements in d′ but no significant stimulus-specific changes in either static or dynamic MAE duration at posttest relative to a pretest. Power analysis indicated that the data were approximately 100 times more likely given the hypothesis of no MAE change than the hypothesis of a 10% relative change. In light of converging evidence in the MAE literatur...
Perceiving a visual object often leads to the formation of its representation in memory. In this ...
AbstractOur ability to make fine visual discriminations improves with practice, and so at some level...
AbstractPerceptual learning of motion direction discrimination is generally thought to rely on the m...
AbstractThe representation modification hypothesis of perceptual learning attributes the practice-in...
AbstractSeveral previous psychophysical and neurophysiological studies have investigated the separat...
AbstractOne of the hallmarks of perceptual learning is specificity, the lack of transfer of the impr...
AbstractStudies of perceptual learning consistently found that improvement is stimulus specific. The...
Our sensory experiences over a range of different timescales shape our perception of the environment...
AbstractSeveral fMRI studies have reported MT+ response increases correlated with perception of the ...
AbstractActivation of the human visual motion area V5/MT was previously thought to be the basis of t...
AbstractWe determined whether distracting the observer’s attention from an adapting stimulus could d...
Evidences of perceptual changes that accompany motor activity have been limited primarily to auditio...
The motion aftereffect is a robust illusion of visual motion resulting from exposure to a moving pa...
AbstractThe widely accepted disinhibition theory of the motion after-effect (MAE) proposes that the ...
AbstractAfter an observer adapts to a moving stimulus, texture within a stationary stimulus is perce...
Perceiving a visual object often leads to the formation of its representation in memory. In this ...
AbstractOur ability to make fine visual discriminations improves with practice, and so at some level...
AbstractPerceptual learning of motion direction discrimination is generally thought to rely on the m...
AbstractThe representation modification hypothesis of perceptual learning attributes the practice-in...
AbstractSeveral previous psychophysical and neurophysiological studies have investigated the separat...
AbstractOne of the hallmarks of perceptual learning is specificity, the lack of transfer of the impr...
AbstractStudies of perceptual learning consistently found that improvement is stimulus specific. The...
Our sensory experiences over a range of different timescales shape our perception of the environment...
AbstractSeveral fMRI studies have reported MT+ response increases correlated with perception of the ...
AbstractActivation of the human visual motion area V5/MT was previously thought to be the basis of t...
AbstractWe determined whether distracting the observer’s attention from an adapting stimulus could d...
Evidences of perceptual changes that accompany motor activity have been limited primarily to auditio...
The motion aftereffect is a robust illusion of visual motion resulting from exposure to a moving pa...
AbstractThe widely accepted disinhibition theory of the motion after-effect (MAE) proposes that the ...
AbstractAfter an observer adapts to a moving stimulus, texture within a stationary stimulus is perce...
Perceiving a visual object often leads to the formation of its representation in memory. In this ...
AbstractOur ability to make fine visual discriminations improves with practice, and so at some level...
AbstractPerceptual learning of motion direction discrimination is generally thought to rely on the m...