Responses to Opposed Directions of Motion: Continuum or Independent Mechanisms?

[1]  Frans A. J. Verstraten,et al.  Movement aftereffect of bi-vectorial transparent motion , 1994, Vision Research.

[2]  J. Raymond Complete interocular transfer of motion adaptation effects on motion coherence thresholds , 1993, Vision Research.

[3]  J. Raymond Movement direction analysers: Independence and bandwidth , 1993, Vision Research.

[4]  R Blake,et al.  Another perspective on the visual motion aftereffect. , 1992, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[5]  Avi Chaudhuri,et al.  Eye movements and the motion aftereffect: Alternatives to the induced motion hypothesis , 1991, Vision Research.

[6]  A. Chaudhuri Modulation of the motion aftereffect by selective attention , 1990, Nature.

[7]  J. van Santen,et al.  Elaborated Reichardt detectors. , 1985, Journal of the Optical Society of America. A, Optics and image science.

[8]  E H Adelson,et al.  Spatiotemporal energy models for the perception of motion. , 1985, Journal of the Optical Society of America. A, Optics and image science.

[9]  G. Mather The Movement Aftereffect and a Distribution-Shift Model for Coding the Direction of Visual Movement , 1980, Perception.

[10]  R. Sekuler,et al.  Masking of motion by broadband and filtered directional noise , 1979 .

[11]  R. Sekuler,et al.  Adaptation alters perceived direction of motion , 1976, Vision Research.

[12]  M J Morgan,et al.  The Aftereffect of Tracking Eye Movements , 1976, Perception.

[13]  R. Day,et al.  Reduction or Disappearance of Visual After Effect of Movement in the Absence of Patterned Surround , 1971, Nature.

[14]  H. Barlow,et al.  Evidence for a Physiological Explanation of the Waterfall Phenomenon and Figural After-effects , 1963, Nature.

[15]  N. Sutherland Figural After-Effects and Apparent Size , 1961 .