AbstractApparent motion is an illusory perception of movement that can be induced by alternating presentations of static objects. Already in Wertheimer’s early investigation of the phenomenon [Wertheimer, M. (1912). Experimentelle Studien über das Sehen von Bewegung. Zeitschrift fur Psychologie, 61, 161–265], he mentions that voluntary attention can influence the way in which an ambiguous apparent motion display is perceived. But until now, few studies have investigated how strong the modulation of apparent motion through attention can be under different stimulus and task conditions. We used bistable motion quartets of two different sizes, where the perception of vertical and horizontal motion is equally likely. Eleven observers participate...
AbstractRecent studies have shown evidence for modulation of cortical activity by attention in visua...
In tasks where people monitor moving objects, such the multiple object tracking task (MOT), observer...
AbstractPrevious studies [e.g. Vision Research 40 (2000) 173] have shown that when observers are req...
AbstractApparent motion is an illusory perception of movement that can be induced by alternating pre...
Apparent motion is an illusory perception of movement that can be induced by alternating presentatio...
AbstractAttention-based motion perception refers to the phenomenon that a stimulus with ambiguous mo...
Apparent motion refers to how the discontinuous presentation of the same display in different instan...
AbstractHuman observers can extract a given motion direction from sets of random dots moving simulta...
AbstractAlthough it is well established that attention affects visual performance in many ways, by u...
AbstractElement shape biases the perceived direction in ambiguous apparent motion displays. Likewise...
When a global moving pattern is superimposed on high-contrast stationary or slowly moving stimuli, t...
AbstractMotion repulsion involves interaction between two directions of motion. Since attention is k...
AbstractThe minimum stimulus necessary to define motion is a change in position from one location to...
AbstractWhen a static line is presented near a brief cue, participants report motion within the line...
Visual awareness of an event, object, or scene is, by essence, an integrated experience, whereby dif...
AbstractRecent studies have shown evidence for modulation of cortical activity by attention in visua...
In tasks where people monitor moving objects, such the multiple object tracking task (MOT), observer...
AbstractPrevious studies [e.g. Vision Research 40 (2000) 173] have shown that when observers are req...
AbstractApparent motion is an illusory perception of movement that can be induced by alternating pre...
Apparent motion is an illusory perception of movement that can be induced by alternating presentatio...
AbstractAttention-based motion perception refers to the phenomenon that a stimulus with ambiguous mo...
Apparent motion refers to how the discontinuous presentation of the same display in different instan...
AbstractHuman observers can extract a given motion direction from sets of random dots moving simulta...
AbstractAlthough it is well established that attention affects visual performance in many ways, by u...
AbstractElement shape biases the perceived direction in ambiguous apparent motion displays. Likewise...
When a global moving pattern is superimposed on high-contrast stationary or slowly moving stimuli, t...
AbstractMotion repulsion involves interaction between two directions of motion. Since attention is k...
AbstractThe minimum stimulus necessary to define motion is a change in position from one location to...
AbstractWhen a static line is presented near a brief cue, participants report motion within the line...
Visual awareness of an event, object, or scene is, by essence, an integrated experience, whereby dif...
AbstractRecent studies have shown evidence for modulation of cortical activity by attention in visua...
In tasks where people monitor moving objects, such the multiple object tracking task (MOT), observer...
AbstractPrevious studies [e.g. Vision Research 40 (2000) 173] have shown that when observers are req...