AbstractA number of psychophysical and physiological studies have suggested that first- and second-order motion signals are processed, at least initially, by independent pathways, and that the two pathways both consist of multiple motion-detecting channels that are each narrowly tuned to a different spatial scale (spatial frequency). However, the precise number and nature of the mechanisms that subserve first- and second-order motion perception in human vision remain both controversial and speculative. We sought to clarify this issue by conducting selective adaptation experiments, in which modulation-depth thresholds for identifying the direction of stimulus motion of first-order (luminance-defined) and second-order (contrast-defined) drift...
AbstractPerceiving motion patterns in visual scenes in which speed or motion direction varies over s...
Recent work on motion processing has suggested a distinction between first-order cues (such as lumin...
Fast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous test pat...
AbstractConverging evidence suggests that, at least initially, first-order (luminance defined) and s...
AbstractA static or counterphase (target) grating surrounded by drifting (inducer) gratings is perce...
AbstractPerceiving motion patterns in visual scenes in which speed or motion direction varies over s...
AbstractThis study assessed spatial summation of first-order (luminance-defined) and second-order (c...
AbstractRecent neurological studies of selective impairments in first and second-order motion proces...
AbstractPrevious studies [e.g. Vision Research 40 (2000) 173] have shown that when observers are req...
AbstractHuman vision can detect spatiotemporal information conveyed by first-order modulations of lu...
Fast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous test pat...
none5noFast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous t...
AbstractVision is sensitive to first-order modulations of luminance and second-order modulations of ...
AbstractThe intention of this series of experiments was to determine the extent to which the pathway...
AbstractThis study characterises the spatiotemporal “window of visibility” for first-order motion (l...
AbstractPerceiving motion patterns in visual scenes in which speed or motion direction varies over s...
Recent work on motion processing has suggested a distinction between first-order cues (such as lumin...
Fast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous test pat...
AbstractConverging evidence suggests that, at least initially, first-order (luminance defined) and s...
AbstractA static or counterphase (target) grating surrounded by drifting (inducer) gratings is perce...
AbstractPerceiving motion patterns in visual scenes in which speed or motion direction varies over s...
AbstractThis study assessed spatial summation of first-order (luminance-defined) and second-order (c...
AbstractRecent neurological studies of selective impairments in first and second-order motion proces...
AbstractPrevious studies [e.g. Vision Research 40 (2000) 173] have shown that when observers are req...
AbstractHuman vision can detect spatiotemporal information conveyed by first-order modulations of lu...
Fast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous test pat...
none5noFast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous t...
AbstractVision is sensitive to first-order modulations of luminance and second-order modulations of ...
AbstractThe intention of this series of experiments was to determine the extent to which the pathway...
AbstractThis study characterises the spatiotemporal “window of visibility” for first-order motion (l...
AbstractPerceiving motion patterns in visual scenes in which speed or motion direction varies over s...
Recent work on motion processing has suggested a distinction between first-order cues (such as lumin...
Fast adaptation biases the perceived motion direction of a subsequently presented ambiguous test pat...