AbstractThe brain processes distinct attributes such as colour and motion in anatomically largely segregated systems. Moreover, these two attributes are perceived with different latencies. Here, we show that the time required to bind these two attributes differs too. In psychophysical experiments, we determined minimal presentation times required to perceptually pair spatially separate pairs of stimuli consisting of colour or motion. Binding two colours required longer presentation times than binding the directions of two moving stimuli. Cross-attribute binding between colour and motion took longer than within-attribute binding. This was so even when the relative perceptual delay between colour and motion was compensated for, which accelera...
AbstractVisual input is segregated in the brain into subsystems that process different attributes su...
When a stimulus oscillates in both colour and direction of motion, changes in colour must lag behind...
SummaryBackgroundColor and motion serve as the prime examples of segregated processing in the visual...
AbstractThe brain processes distinct attributes such as colour and motion in anatomically largely se...
The brain processes distinct attributes such as colour and motion in anatomically largely segregated...
The answer as to how visual attributes processed in different brain loci at different speeds are bou...
AbstractBackground: When simultaneous visual events appear to occur at different times, the discrepa...
AbstractIt has been demonstrated that subjects do not report changes in color and direction of motio...
In human visual perception, there is evidence that different visual attributes, such as colour, form...
AbstractPsychophysical experiments with stimuli oscillating concurrently in colour and orientation r...
Color-motion asynchrony (CMA) refers to an apparent lag of direction of motion when a dynamic stimul...
AbstractBehavioural, neuro-anatomical and clinical evidence suggests that different aspects of the v...
A color change that is physically simultaneous with the onset of object motion may be perceived as o...
Perceiving a visual object requires binding sensory estimates of its various physical attributes. Th...
Visual input is segregated in the brain into subsystems that process different attributes such as mo...
AbstractVisual input is segregated in the brain into subsystems that process different attributes su...
When a stimulus oscillates in both colour and direction of motion, changes in colour must lag behind...
SummaryBackgroundColor and motion serve as the prime examples of segregated processing in the visual...
AbstractThe brain processes distinct attributes such as colour and motion in anatomically largely se...
The brain processes distinct attributes such as colour and motion in anatomically largely segregated...
The answer as to how visual attributes processed in different brain loci at different speeds are bou...
AbstractBackground: When simultaneous visual events appear to occur at different times, the discrepa...
AbstractIt has been demonstrated that subjects do not report changes in color and direction of motio...
In human visual perception, there is evidence that different visual attributes, such as colour, form...
AbstractPsychophysical experiments with stimuli oscillating concurrently in colour and orientation r...
Color-motion asynchrony (CMA) refers to an apparent lag of direction of motion when a dynamic stimul...
AbstractBehavioural, neuro-anatomical and clinical evidence suggests that different aspects of the v...
A color change that is physically simultaneous with the onset of object motion may be perceived as o...
Perceiving a visual object requires binding sensory estimates of its various physical attributes. Th...
Visual input is segregated in the brain into subsystems that process different attributes such as mo...
AbstractVisual input is segregated in the brain into subsystems that process different attributes su...
When a stimulus oscillates in both colour and direction of motion, changes in colour must lag behind...
SummaryBackgroundColor and motion serve as the prime examples of segregated processing in the visual...