AbstractDirection-specific losses in sensitivity were found for a test grating which was superimposed on a stationary contrast pedestal and which moved either in the same or opposite direction as a prior biasing stimulus. Three types of biasing stimuli were employed: a grating swept through 270° in 45° steps, a single 90° step of a grating, and a single 90° step of a grating which contained a blank IFI and whose perceived direction was reversed. For the biasing sweep and the single 90° step, the response of directionally selective mechanisms (directional motion energy) is greatest for the direction which corresponds to the actual physical displacement of the stimulus. For the biasing step with an IFI, the response is maximum for the opposit...
Abstract. Recent findings suggest that the visual system is biased by its past stimulation to detect...
AbstractAdaptation to a moving stimulus changes the perception of a stationary grating and also redu...
Prolonged exposure to visual stimuli causes a bias in observers' responses to subsequent stimuli. Su...
AbstractDirection-specific losses in sensitivity were found for a test grating which was superimpose...
The perceived direction of a motion step (probe stimulus) can be influenced by an earlier motion ste...
AbstractThe perceived direction of a motion step (probe stimulus) can be influenced by an earlier mo...
AbstractThe perceived direction of a directionally ambiguous stimulus is influenced by the moving di...
AbstractOpponency between opposite directions of motion is a characteristic of many models of moveme...
Three experiments were conducted to analyse the effect of contrast and adaptation state on the abili...
AbstractThe widely accepted disinhibition theory of the motion after-effect (MAE) proposes that the ...
AbstractWe investigated whether the size aftereffect (apparent spatial-frequency shift after adaptat...
AbstractThe perceived motion of a vertical sine-wave luminance grating which undergoes an abrupt 180...
Adaptation to a moving stimulus changes the perception of a stationary grating and also reduces cont...
Physiological and psychophysical evidence indicate that the human visual system contains mechanisms ...
AbstractHow motion onset asynchrony (MOA) alters the effects of stimulus size on reaction time (RT) ...
Abstract. Recent findings suggest that the visual system is biased by its past stimulation to detect...
AbstractAdaptation to a moving stimulus changes the perception of a stationary grating and also redu...
Prolonged exposure to visual stimuli causes a bias in observers' responses to subsequent stimuli. Su...
AbstractDirection-specific losses in sensitivity were found for a test grating which was superimpose...
The perceived direction of a motion step (probe stimulus) can be influenced by an earlier motion ste...
AbstractThe perceived direction of a motion step (probe stimulus) can be influenced by an earlier mo...
AbstractThe perceived direction of a directionally ambiguous stimulus is influenced by the moving di...
AbstractOpponency between opposite directions of motion is a characteristic of many models of moveme...
Three experiments were conducted to analyse the effect of contrast and adaptation state on the abili...
AbstractThe widely accepted disinhibition theory of the motion after-effect (MAE) proposes that the ...
AbstractWe investigated whether the size aftereffect (apparent spatial-frequency shift after adaptat...
AbstractThe perceived motion of a vertical sine-wave luminance grating which undergoes an abrupt 180...
Adaptation to a moving stimulus changes the perception of a stationary grating and also reduces cont...
Physiological and psychophysical evidence indicate that the human visual system contains mechanisms ...
AbstractHow motion onset asynchrony (MOA) alters the effects of stimulus size on reaction time (RT) ...
Abstract. Recent findings suggest that the visual system is biased by its past stimulation to detect...
AbstractAdaptation to a moving stimulus changes the perception of a stationary grating and also redu...
Prolonged exposure to visual stimuli causes a bias in observers' responses to subsequent stimuli. Su...