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Donderi D C - - 1985
Observers were trained to point with feedback to red and blue dots whose images had been laterally displaced in opposite directions by a reversible prism. On pretraining and posttraining trials the red and blue dots were aligned vertically in the absence of visual orientation cues. The alignment was modified by ...
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Petersik J T - - 1984
An effort was made to produce negative organizational aftereffects in response to a perceptually ambiguous stimulus that can be seen as a cube in either of two orientations. 6 subjects were adapted to alternative disambiguated versions of the ambiguous cube, shown either in green or magenta light. When tested with ...
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Spanos N P - - 1984
Two experiments assessed the effect of hypnotically suggested arm anesthesia on adaptation to displacing prisms. In Study 1, 30 highly susceptible subjects adapted to prisms by pointing at a visual target for 2 min. with their hypnotically anesthetized dominant arm. Suggestion and hypnosis were then "lifted," and subjects were randomly ...
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Soetens E - - 1984
A mathematical model is developed to describe sequential effects in two-choice reaction time experiments with a short response-stimulus interval. Evidence is briefly discussed that in conditions with short response-stimulus intervals, automatic aftereffects dominate sequential effects, and the influence of subjective expectancy can be neglected. In these conditions the model premises ...
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Craske B - - 1984
In four experiments we examined the adaptation and aftereffect that resulted from a treatment yielding tactile/kinesthetic length discordance between the arms. Perceived discordance diminished with trials and tended to zero. Subsequent visual/tactile cross-modal judgments of distance showed the aftereffect to be a change in the perceived location of an unseen ...
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Reinhardt-Rutland A H - - 1984
Prolonged induced movement-in-depth in a static circle was elicited by a spiral stimulus. Afterwards an aftereffect was observed in the circle. The aftereffect was towards the subject after induced movement away from the subject, and away from the subject after induced movement towards the subject. Longer aftereffect was observed with ...
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Smith A T - - 1984
The motion aftereffect caused by adaptation to moving bars is visible in a stationary test pattern consisting of static visual noise (texture). The aftereffect resulting from adaptation to moving bars presented on a background of texture is highly dependent on the direction and velocity of motion of the background during ...
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Allan L G - - 1984
It has been shown that judged duration of tones depends on pitch (the kappa effect), on order of presentation (the time-order error), and on repetition (a negative duration aftereffect). Recently, a duration aftereffect contingent on pitch and a duration aftereffect contingent on order of presentation have been described. Our results ...
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Petersik J T - - 1984
After adaptation to a perspective simulation of a square plane rotating in depth, an ambiguous rotation simulation (ie one containing no perspective information) appears to rotate in the direction opposite that of adaptation. The strength of this three-dimensional motion aftereffect (MAE) is proportional to the amount of perspective available in ...
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Reinhardt-Rutland A H - - 1983
Duration of aftereffect of induced rotation was shown to increase with the number of uniformly-spaced radial lines in an inducing stimulus. Possible explanations could be based on (a) the amount of shearing between radial lines in the inducing and static stimuli during adaptation, or (b) the angular displacement required for ...
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Reinhardt-Rutland A H - - 1983
The present investigation shows that the aftereffect of induced rotation is observable when there is a large separation of inducing and static areas; it also has a substantial monocular component. These points are consistent with the possible involvement of lateral inhibition in movement detectors. (a) A recent study shows the ...
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Harris J P - - 1983
The effects of chlorpromazine (CPZ) and promazine on the visual aftereffects of tilt and motion were measured. CPZ markedly reduced the strength of both aftereffects, while promazine produced a smaller and not always significant reduction. Control experiments suggested that the effects were produced in the central visual system rather than ...
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Williams D W - - 1982
The spatially localized threshold-elevation aftereffect of spatial-frequency adaptation was measured by using localized, aperiodic test patterns that have bandpass Fourier transforms. At a given retinal location, the threshold-elevation curves are consistent with the fatigue of size-turned mechanisms with center-surround sensitivity profile. Only a few different sizes of such mechanisms were ...
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Price R L - - 1982
If one adapts to a moving repetitive stimulus of stripes that is suddenly stopped, the stripes will appear to move backward. This apparent backward motion is the motion aftereffect (MAE), and its duration is a measure of its magnitude. If one eye adapts to the moving stimulus and the other ...
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Carney T - - 1982
In the tilt aftereffect a grating or bar is perceived as being slightly rotated from its veridical orientation if it is preceded by a similar adaptation stimulus with a slightly different orientation. It has been reported that the tilt aftereffect is not direction specific. That is, the magnitude of the ...
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Wolfe J M - - 1982
The tilt aftereffect (TAE) is used to demonstrate the existence of a purely binocular process in human vision. A purely binocular process is a process that can be activated only by matched inputs to the two eyes. It is insensitive to monocular stimulation. The TAE can be produced by exposure ...
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Held R - - 1982
The stimulus specificities of the color-contingent tilt aftereffect resemble those involved in the McCollough aftereffect, with the major exception that the magnitude of the former increases monotonically with the spatial frequency of matched inducing and test gratings; this monotonic increase is not found for the achromatic tilt aftereffect. Like the ...
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Keck M J - - 1982
The interocular transfer of the motion aftereffect (MAE) was measured in three groups of strabismic subjects (six with monofixation, nine with alternation, four with anomalous retinal correspondence) and compared with a group of four normal subjects. The duration of the MAE was measured using sinusoidal gratings of 0.5 c/deg subtending ...
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Bjørklund R A - - 1981
The threshold-elevation aftereffect was measured ipsiocularly and interocularly following grating adaptation of one eye. The functions relating aftereffect magnitude to adapting contrast and adaptation time were similar under the two testing conditions, with interocular transfer remaining fairly constant; decay times were similar for ipsiocular and interocular aftereffects of comparable magnitude, ...
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Keck M J - - 1980
The present experiments examine the suprathreshold response of the motion or direction-selective portion of the human visual system by means of the motion aftereffect (MAE). The MAE was measured as a function of the contrast and spatial frequency of moving sinusoidal gratings. For spatial frequencies less than 1 cy/deg, the ...
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Riggs L A - - 1980
Alternate inspection of patterns moving in orthogonal directions induces an aftereffect in which a stationary test pattern seems to move in a new direction. This direction is the resultant of the two directions of aftereffect that would have arisen from separately inspecting each of the moving patterns. The direction in ...
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Lackner J R - - 1980
Postural and visual motion aftereffects may be experienced after exposure to alternating periods of free fall and increased gravitoinertial force in parabolic flight. In an aftereffect, the body feels as if it is again undergoing periodic changes in force level because of motion of the substrate; strong apparent postural motion ...
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Cavanagh P - - 1980
Observers adapted to motion by looking at rotating logarithmic spirals. They were tested with a stationary mirror image of the adapting spiral in which all contours were at 90 degrees to those of the first spiral. Motion aftereffects were reported in the contrarotational direction--that is, observers who had seen clockwise ...
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Blake T - - 1979
Previous research on visual contingent aftereffects has been concerned with examining the effects of various parameters (e.g., spatial frequency and luminance) on the adaptation to, and decay of, contingent aftereffects. The current study tested the viability of using visual contingent aftereffects in a display context. Using established characteristics of contingent ...
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Anstis S M - - 1979
Following adaptation to a field of light which was modulated by a rising ramp so that it repetitively grows gradually brighter, a steady test field of light appears to be gradually growing dimmer. In this study, if a small grey spot of constant luminance was centered in the brightening field, ...
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Thompson P G - - 1978
The decay of several visual aftereffects may be prolonged by interposing a period of light-free or pattern-free viewing between adaptation and testing. We demonstrate that this storage phenomenon can be observed using the threshold elevation aftereffect that follows inspection of a high-contrast grating pattern. Control experiments comparing thresholds for vertical ...
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Weisstein N - - 1977
Motion aftereffects, typically found to result only from localized retinal stimulation, were obtained within regions of the visual field that had not been stimulated by moving contours. "Phantom" stripes are seen moving through a physically homogeneous (empty) region of the visual field when vertical stripes move above and below that ...
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Lackner J R - - 1977
During rotation about the Z-axos while recumbent one is exposed to a changing pattern of pressure cues over the body surface. If the body is only loosely padded in the experimental apparatus, then apparent motion of part of the body surface may be experienced sometime after rotation has been terminated. ...
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Denton G G - - 1977
Visual motion aftereffect characteristics comparable to those associated with rotary and translatory movement of a test field are demonstrated for simulated rectilinear motion of the observer. The intensity and time duration of the phenomenon are shown to be positively correlated. The implications of this for individual observers are considered. The ...
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Keck M J - - 1977
Short-term adaptation to moving sinusoidal gratings results in a motion aftereffect which decays in time. The time decay of the motion aftereffect has been measured psychophysically, and it is found to depend on (i) the spontaneous recovery from the adapted state, and (ii) the contrast of the test grating. We ...
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May J G - - 1976
Two-dimensional Fourier analysis of checkerboards reveals that major components are at a 45 degree angle to the check edges. After adapting to chromatic checkerboards, subjects who viewed achromatic grating stimuli reported that complementary color aftereffects are aligned with spatial frequency components rather than with the edges in the pattern.
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Tyson P - - 1975
Five subjects were asked to report the brightness and duration of afterimages formed in a region where a border had previously been exposed. The temporal and spatial aftereffects of the border on the formation of the afterimage varied with the duration of the border and these aftereffects were within the ...
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Blakemore C - - 1971
Random-dot stereograms when used as adaptation stimuli can influence the perceived depth of similar test stimuli. Adaptation for 1 minute is sufficient to evoke this three-dimensional aftereffect for several seconds. This aftereffect must occur after stereopsis because prior to stereopsis no relevant monocular cues exist in these adaptation and test ...
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Green M - - 1983
Prolonged viewing of a moving pattern selectively elevates the threshold for a pattern moving in the same direction and induces the classical motion aftereffect (MAE). The aftereffect is seen as a slow drift in the opposite direction, which is visible even with the eyes shut or while viewing a uniform ...
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Blakemore C - - 1969
If, after prolonged observation of a striped pattern, one views a grating of the same orientation with somewhat narrower bars, then the bars seem even thinner than in fact they are. Broader bars seem broader still. This finding implies a system of size-detecting channels in humnan vision. The phenomenon may ...
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Masland R H - - 1969
If a human observer fixates a moving spiral pattern for 15 minutes, a negative aftereffect of motion is perceived when he inspects a stationary spiral 20 hours later. The illusory motion is seen only when the stationary test stimulus falls upon the portion of the retina which had been stimulated ...
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Hepler N - - 1968
After human observers alternately view green stripes moving up and red stripes moving down for periods of 1/2 to 4 hours, they see a pink aftereffect when white stripes move up and a green aftereffect when white stripes move down. Longer exposures produce aftereffects which are visible 20 hours after ...
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SEKULER R W - - 1963
Prolonged inspection of uniformly moving contours affects differentially the luminance threshold for the detection of test contours as a function of the direction of motion of the test contours. This finding supports a new explanation of the well-known aftereffect.
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