Heading perception and the allocation of attention

[1]  J. Gibson Visually controlled locomotion and visual orientation in animals. , 1998, British journal of psychology.

[2]  D Regan,et al.  How do we avoid confounding the direction we are looking and the direction we are moving? , 1982, Science.

[3]  Daniel J. Hannon,et al.  Direction of self-motion is perceived from optical flow , 1988, Nature.

[4]  D. Roenker,et al.  Age and visual search: expanding the useful field of view. , 1988, Journal of the Optical Society of America. A, Optics and image science.

[5]  D J Hannon,et al.  Eye movements and optical flow. , 1990, Journal of the Optical Society of America. A, Optics and image science.

[6]  Paul A. Braren,et al.  Wayfinding on foot from information in retinal, not optical, flow. , 1992, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[7]  James A. Crowell,et al.  The perception of heading during eye movements , 1992, Nature.

[8]  Constance S. Royden,et al.  Analysis of misperceived observer motion during simulated eye rotations , 1994, Vision Research.

[9]  K Nakayama,et al.  James J. Gibson--an appreciation. , 1994, Psychological review.

[10]  Eli Brenner,et al.  Humans combine the optic flow with static depth cues for robust perception of heading , 1994, Vision Research.

[11]  David N. Lee,et al.  Where we look when we steer , 1994, Nature.

[12]  A. V. van den Berg,et al.  Why two eyes are better than one for judgements of heading , 1994, Nature.

[13]  Yiannis Aloimonos,et al.  Vision and action , 1995, Image Vis. Comput..

[14]  James A. Crowell,et al.  Estimating heading during real and simulated eye movements , 1996, Vision Research.

[15]  A. V. van den Berg,et al.  Judgements of Heading , 1996, Vision Research.

[16]  J. Perrone,et al.  Human Heading Estimation During Visually Simulated Curvilinear Motion , 1997, Vision Research.

[17]  Julie M. Harris,et al.  Guidance of locomotion on foot uses perceived target location rather than optic flow , 1998, Current Biology.

[18]  M. Banks,et al.  Depth information and perceived self-motion during simulated gaze rotations , 1998, Vision Research.

[19]  J M Beusmans,et al.  Perceived Object Shape Affects the Perceived Direction of Self-Movement , 1998, Perception.

[20]  Richard A. Andersen,et al.  Visual self-motion perception during head turns , 1998, Nature Neuroscience.

[21]  William H. Warren,et al.  Perception of heading is a brain in the neck , 1998, Nature Neuroscience.

[22]  Julie M. Harris,et al.  Steering, Optic Flow, and the Respective Importance of Depth and Retinal Motion Distribution , 1999, Perception.

[23]  Constance S. Royden,et al.  Differential effects of shared attention on perception of heading and 3-D object motion , 1999, Perception & psychophysics.

[24]  John P. Wann,et al.  Why you should look where you are going , 2000, Nature Neuroscience.