AbstractAcross three experiments, this study investigated the visual processing of moving stereoscopic plaid patterns (plaids created with cyclopean components defined by moving binocular disparity embedded in a dynamic random-dot stereogram). Results showed that adaptation to a moving stereoscopic plaid or its components affected the perceived coherence of a luminance test plaid, and vice versa. Cross-domain adaptation suggests that stereoscopic and luminance motion signals feed into a common pattern–motion mechanism, consistent with the idea that stereoscopic motion signals are computed early in the motion processing stream
AbstractThis study employed a selective adaptation paradigm and investigated thresholds for directio...
AbstractLuminance-defined and stereo-defined (cyclopean) motion share some common properties, sugges...
AbstractThis study compared direction discrimination of cyclopean (stereoscopic) and luminance motio...
AbstractAcross three experiments, this study investigated the visual processing of moving stereoscop...
Across four experiments, this study investigated direction-specific adaptation and simultaneous cont...
AbstractThis study investigated whether the stereoscopic (cyclopean) motion aftereffect (induced by ...
AbstractThis study investigated the effect of exposure duration on the perceived direction of cyclop...
AbstractAcross two experiments, this study investigated the spatial frequency tuning and orientation...
AbstractAcross five experiments this study investigated the disparity tuning of the stereoscopic mot...
AbstractThis study employed a selective adaptation paradigm and investigated thresholds for directio...
Across four experiments, this study investigated direction-specific adaptation and simultaneous cont...
AbstractThis paper reviews literature on the motion processing of dynamic change in binocular dispar...
AbstractAcross five experiments this study investigated the disparity tuning of the stereoscopic mot...
AbstractThis report adds to existing evidence that a monocular, feature-sensitive motion mechanism i...
AbstractAn interaction in apparent motion between perceived three-dimensional forms defined by stere...
AbstractThis study employed a selective adaptation paradigm and investigated thresholds for directio...
AbstractLuminance-defined and stereo-defined (cyclopean) motion share some common properties, sugges...
AbstractThis study compared direction discrimination of cyclopean (stereoscopic) and luminance motio...
AbstractAcross three experiments, this study investigated the visual processing of moving stereoscop...
Across four experiments, this study investigated direction-specific adaptation and simultaneous cont...
AbstractThis study investigated whether the stereoscopic (cyclopean) motion aftereffect (induced by ...
AbstractThis study investigated the effect of exposure duration on the perceived direction of cyclop...
AbstractAcross two experiments, this study investigated the spatial frequency tuning and orientation...
AbstractAcross five experiments this study investigated the disparity tuning of the stereoscopic mot...
AbstractThis study employed a selective adaptation paradigm and investigated thresholds for directio...
Across four experiments, this study investigated direction-specific adaptation and simultaneous cont...
AbstractThis paper reviews literature on the motion processing of dynamic change in binocular dispar...
AbstractAcross five experiments this study investigated the disparity tuning of the stereoscopic mot...
AbstractThis report adds to existing evidence that a monocular, feature-sensitive motion mechanism i...
AbstractAn interaction in apparent motion between perceived three-dimensional forms defined by stere...
AbstractThis study employed a selective adaptation paradigm and investigated thresholds for directio...
AbstractLuminance-defined and stereo-defined (cyclopean) motion share some common properties, sugges...
AbstractThis study compared direction discrimination of cyclopean (stereoscopic) and luminance motio...