AbstractThe contention is examined that the oblique effect, i.e., the well-known performance deficit in detecting orientation difference in oblique lines as compared to vertical and horizontal ones, has its origin in a relative deficiency of neurons with obliquely-oriented receptive fields in the primary visual cortex. Psychophysical observations demonstrate a prominent oblique effect also in visual tasks involving widely-separated elements and other stimuli that would elicit little or no response in oriented neurons in the visual cortex. Conversely, some tasks, e.g. position discrimination, exhibit no oblique effect even with short, high-contrast lines. When the comparison with the reference can be accomplished during a single brief exposu...
There is an over-representation of neurons in early visual cortical areas that respond most strongly...
An experiment contrasted the effect of four training schedules in a visual orientation reproduction ...
AbstractVisual ability for sine waves and other narrowband stimuli shows an oblique effect—worst per...
AbstractThe contention is examined that the oblique effect, i.e., the well-known performance deficit...
AbstractA number of studies have demonstrated a reduction in neural activity for oblique gratings as...
AbstractAn oblique effect is evident in vernier acuity for abutting lines. In Experiment 1 we show t...
Summary : The visual perception of orientation and « the oblique effect ». This paper surveys studie...
AbstractThe experiments described here used event-related potentials (ERPs) to investigate the neura...
The details of oriented visual stimuli are better resolved when they are horizontal or vertical rath...
AbstractOrientation discrimination was measured for line targets in the fovea and in locations along...
The neural basis of an oblique effect, a reduced visual sensitivity for obliquely oriented stimuli, ...
AbstractIn the classic oblique effect contrast detection thresholds, orientation discrimination thre...
AbstractThresholds were measured for five tasks: line detection, intensity discrimination, two-line ...
Orientation discrimination is much better for patterns oriented along the horizontal or vertical (ca...
Most of the high-order aberrations of the eye are not circularly symmetric. Hence, while it is well ...
There is an over-representation of neurons in early visual cortical areas that respond most strongly...
An experiment contrasted the effect of four training schedules in a visual orientation reproduction ...
AbstractVisual ability for sine waves and other narrowband stimuli shows an oblique effect—worst per...
AbstractThe contention is examined that the oblique effect, i.e., the well-known performance deficit...
AbstractA number of studies have demonstrated a reduction in neural activity for oblique gratings as...
AbstractAn oblique effect is evident in vernier acuity for abutting lines. In Experiment 1 we show t...
Summary : The visual perception of orientation and « the oblique effect ». This paper surveys studie...
AbstractThe experiments described here used event-related potentials (ERPs) to investigate the neura...
The details of oriented visual stimuli are better resolved when they are horizontal or vertical rath...
AbstractOrientation discrimination was measured for line targets in the fovea and in locations along...
The neural basis of an oblique effect, a reduced visual sensitivity for obliquely oriented stimuli, ...
AbstractIn the classic oblique effect contrast detection thresholds, orientation discrimination thre...
AbstractThresholds were measured for five tasks: line detection, intensity discrimination, two-line ...
Orientation discrimination is much better for patterns oriented along the horizontal or vertical (ca...
Most of the high-order aberrations of the eye are not circularly symmetric. Hence, while it is well ...
There is an over-representation of neurons in early visual cortical areas that respond most strongly...
An experiment contrasted the effect of four training schedules in a visual orientation reproduction ...
AbstractVisual ability for sine waves and other narrowband stimuli shows an oblique effect—worst per...