AbstractMoving stimuli cause the position of flashed stimuli to appear shifted in the direction of motion (position capture). To examine whether position capture depends on low-level motion interactions or perception of integrated object motion, we employed a slit-view display. Two line-drawn diamonds translated horizontally in opposite directions, one above and one below the fixation cross, either behind an occluding surface with a narrow slit or without occluding surface. When the diamonds were in vertical alignment, two vertical bars were flashed, one in the center of each diamond. In the slit-view condition, the diamonds were visible through a 4-, 2-, or 1-pixel vertical slit; the width of the flashed bars always matched the width of th...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect is a robust visual illusion in which a flash appears to spatially lag a...
In the present study, we investigated whether motion streaks, produced by fast moving dots Geisler 1...
Perceived position depends on many factors, including motion present in a visual scene. Convincing e...
AbstractMoving stimuli cause the position of flashed stimuli to appear shifted in the direction of m...
AbstractMotion is known to distort visual space, producing illusory mislocalizations for flashed obj...
AbstractSeveral studies have shown that the perceived position of a briefly presented stimulus can b...
NoMotion is known to distort visual space, producing illusory mislocalizations for flashed objects. ...
AbstractWe measured the effects of coherent motion of one set of dots on the perceived location of G...
AbstractIt has been shown that a moving visual pattern can influence the perceived position of outly...
AbstractObject motion and position have long been thought to involve largely independent visual comp...
AbstractSeveral visual illusions demonstrate that the neural processing of visual position can be af...
AbstractVisual motion signals distort the perceived positions of briefly presented stimuli; a briefl...
AbstractMotion can influence the perceived position of nearby stationary objects (Nature Neuroscienc...
We measured the effects of coherent motion of one set of dots on the perceived location of Gaussian ...
The position of a moving object is often mislocalised in the direction of movement. At the input sta...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect is a robust visual illusion in which a flash appears to spatially lag a...
In the present study, we investigated whether motion streaks, produced by fast moving dots Geisler 1...
Perceived position depends on many factors, including motion present in a visual scene. Convincing e...
AbstractMoving stimuli cause the position of flashed stimuli to appear shifted in the direction of m...
AbstractMotion is known to distort visual space, producing illusory mislocalizations for flashed obj...
AbstractSeveral studies have shown that the perceived position of a briefly presented stimulus can b...
NoMotion is known to distort visual space, producing illusory mislocalizations for flashed objects. ...
AbstractWe measured the effects of coherent motion of one set of dots on the perceived location of G...
AbstractIt has been shown that a moving visual pattern can influence the perceived position of outly...
AbstractObject motion and position have long been thought to involve largely independent visual comp...
AbstractSeveral visual illusions demonstrate that the neural processing of visual position can be af...
AbstractVisual motion signals distort the perceived positions of briefly presented stimuli; a briefl...
AbstractMotion can influence the perceived position of nearby stationary objects (Nature Neuroscienc...
We measured the effects of coherent motion of one set of dots on the perceived location of Gaussian ...
The position of a moving object is often mislocalised in the direction of movement. At the input sta...
AbstractThe flash-lag effect is a robust visual illusion in which a flash appears to spatially lag a...
In the present study, we investigated whether motion streaks, produced by fast moving dots Geisler 1...
Perceived position depends on many factors, including motion present in a visual scene. Convincing e...