AbstractThere has been a controversy in the apparent motion literature regarding the influence of 3-D distances between motion tokens on correspondence matching. The current series of experiments indicates that this discrepancy results because the effect of three-dimensional distance is too small to be detected unless the retinal coordinates of the motion tokens are carefully chosen so as to lead to ambiguous correspondence matches on identical trials. It is also shown that, even when the retinal coordinates of motion tokens are equated, such that the different solutions to the correspondence problem are generated with equal probability, the effect of 3-D distances obtained is relatively small when compared to the effect of the retinal coor...
People make surprising but reliable perceptual errors. Here, we provide a unified explanation for sy...
People make surprising but reliable perceptual errors. Here, we provide a unified explanation for sy...
AbstractThe minimum stimulus necessary to define motion is a change in position from one location to...
AbstractThere has been a controversy in the apparent motion literature regarding the influence of 3-...
AbstractProjective geometry determines how the retinal image of an object deforms as it moves throug...
Image motion is a primary source of visual information about the world. However, before this informa...
Relative binocular disparity cannot tell us the absolute 3-D shape of an object, nor its 3-D traject...
A model that is capable of maintaining the identities of individuated elements as they move is descr...
AbstractWe investigated the extent to which motion repulsion and binocular motion rivalry depend on ...
AbstractWe investigated the extent to which motion repulsion and binocular motion rivalry depend on ...
This thesis examines how the visual system solves the motion correspondence problem. In four related...
AbstractSubjects misjudge distances considerably when forced to rely on extra-retinal information. N...
When an object is tracked with the eyes, veridical perception of the motion of that object and other...
AbstractAn interaction in apparent motion between perceived three-dimensional forms defined by stere...
AbstractHumans can compare the orientations and locations of two motion-defined test bars several de...
People make surprising but reliable perceptual errors. Here, we provide a unified explanation for sy...
People make surprising but reliable perceptual errors. Here, we provide a unified explanation for sy...
AbstractThe minimum stimulus necessary to define motion is a change in position from one location to...
AbstractThere has been a controversy in the apparent motion literature regarding the influence of 3-...
AbstractProjective geometry determines how the retinal image of an object deforms as it moves throug...
Image motion is a primary source of visual information about the world. However, before this informa...
Relative binocular disparity cannot tell us the absolute 3-D shape of an object, nor its 3-D traject...
A model that is capable of maintaining the identities of individuated elements as they move is descr...
AbstractWe investigated the extent to which motion repulsion and binocular motion rivalry depend on ...
AbstractWe investigated the extent to which motion repulsion and binocular motion rivalry depend on ...
This thesis examines how the visual system solves the motion correspondence problem. In four related...
AbstractSubjects misjudge distances considerably when forced to rely on extra-retinal information. N...
When an object is tracked with the eyes, veridical perception of the motion of that object and other...
AbstractAn interaction in apparent motion between perceived three-dimensional forms defined by stere...
AbstractHumans can compare the orientations and locations of two motion-defined test bars several de...
People make surprising but reliable perceptual errors. Here, we provide a unified explanation for sy...
People make surprising but reliable perceptual errors. Here, we provide a unified explanation for sy...
AbstractThe minimum stimulus necessary to define motion is a change in position from one location to...