AbstractTo study the difference of sensitivity to luminance- (LM) and contrast-modulated (CM) stimuli, we compared LM and CM detection thresholds in LM- and CM-noise conditions. The results showed a double dissociation (no or little inter-attribute interaction) between the processing of these stimuli, which implies that both stimuli must be processed, at least at some point, by separate mechanisms and that both stimuli are not merged after a rectification process. A second experiment showed that the internal equivalent noise limiting the CM sensitivity was greater than the one limiting the carrier sensitivity, which suggests that the internal noise occurring before the rectification process is not limiting the CM sensitivity. These results ...
AbstractThis study characterises the spatiotemporal “window of visibility” for first-order motion (l...
AbstractWe studied visual evoked potentials (VEPs) elicited by second-order contrast modulations of ...
We consider the overall shape of the second-order modulation sensitivity function (MSF). Because sec...
AbstractHuman vision can detect spatiotemporal information conveyed by first-order modulations of lu...
AbstractWe consider the overall shape of the second-order modulation sensitivity function (MSF). Bec...
AbstractResearch has shown that the sensitivity to second-order modulations of carrier contrast is l...
AbstractVision is sensitive to first-order luminance modulations and second-order modulations of car...
AbstractVision is sensitive to first-order modulations of luminance and second-order modulations of ...
The human visual system is sensitive to second-order modulations of the local contrast (CM) or ampli...
The ability of the visual system to detect stimuli that vary along dimensions other than luminance o...
ntré d in ntr do st ond ivit pp explains the difference of LM and CM sensitivity. ses, while second...
Recent work on motion processing has suggested a distinction between first-order cues (such as lumin...
AbstractWe estimated spatial summation areas for the detection of luminance-modulated (LM) and contr...
We studied the relationship between the decline in sensitivity that occurs with eccentricity for sti...
To extend our understanding of the early visual hierarchy, we investigated the long-range integratio...
AbstractThis study characterises the spatiotemporal “window of visibility” for first-order motion (l...
AbstractWe studied visual evoked potentials (VEPs) elicited by second-order contrast modulations of ...
We consider the overall shape of the second-order modulation sensitivity function (MSF). Because sec...
AbstractHuman vision can detect spatiotemporal information conveyed by first-order modulations of lu...
AbstractWe consider the overall shape of the second-order modulation sensitivity function (MSF). Bec...
AbstractResearch has shown that the sensitivity to second-order modulations of carrier contrast is l...
AbstractVision is sensitive to first-order luminance modulations and second-order modulations of car...
AbstractVision is sensitive to first-order modulations of luminance and second-order modulations of ...
The human visual system is sensitive to second-order modulations of the local contrast (CM) or ampli...
The ability of the visual system to detect stimuli that vary along dimensions other than luminance o...
ntré d in ntr do st ond ivit pp explains the difference of LM and CM sensitivity. ses, while second...
Recent work on motion processing has suggested a distinction between first-order cues (such as lumin...
AbstractWe estimated spatial summation areas for the detection of luminance-modulated (LM) and contr...
We studied the relationship between the decline in sensitivity that occurs with eccentricity for sti...
To extend our understanding of the early visual hierarchy, we investigated the long-range integratio...
AbstractThis study characterises the spatiotemporal “window of visibility” for first-order motion (l...
AbstractWe studied visual evoked potentials (VEPs) elicited by second-order contrast modulations of ...
We consider the overall shape of the second-order modulation sensitivity function (MSF). Because sec...