Technical Note Another Means for Measuring the Motion Aftereffect

[1]  S. Petersen,et al.  Direction-specific adaptation in area MT of the owl monkey , 1985, Brain Research.

[2]  J. van Santen,et al.  Temporal covariance model of human motion perception. , 1984, Journal of the Optical Society of America. A, Optics and image science.

[3]  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.

[4]  A J Ahumada,et al.  Model of human visual-motion sensing. , 1985, Journal of the Optical Society of America. A, Optics and image science.

[5]  R. Vautin,et al.  Responses of single cells in cat visual cortex to prolonged stimulus movement: neural correlates of visual aftereffects. , 1977, Journal of neurophysiology.

[6]  A. Johnston,et al.  Invariant tuning of motion aftereffect , 1985, Vision Research.

[7]  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.

[8]  Robert Sekuler,et al.  Coherent global motion percepts from stochastic local motions , 1984, Vision Research.

[9]  Michael J Wright,et al.  Apparent Velocity of Motion Aftereffects in Central and Peripheral Vision , 1986, Perception.

[10]  M. Cynader,et al.  Direction-selective adaptation in simple and complex cells in cat striate cortex. , 1988, Journal of neurophysiology.

[11]  S. Anstis The perception of apparent movement. , 1980, Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences.