Explaining the footsteps, belly dancer, Wenceslas, and kickback illusions

scientific article published on 12 December 2006

Explaining the footsteps, belly dancer, Wenceslas, and kickback illusions is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.1167/6.12.5
P932PMC publication ID2637218
P698PubMed publication ID17209742
P5875ResearchGate publication ID6591097

P50authorMargaret LivingstoneQ6759647
Stuart AnstisQ56229903
P2093author name stringHersh Sagreiya
Piers D L Howe
Peter G Thompson
P2860cites workPsychophysical evidence for separate channels for the perception of form, color, movement, and depthQ39680135
Flanker effects in peripheral contrast discrimination--psychophysics and modelingQ43802193
Moving objects appear to slow down at low contrastsQ46291909
Perceived velocity of moving chromatic gratings.Q50921285
Motion capture changes to induced motion at higher luminance contrasts, smaller eccentricities, and larger inducer sizes.Q52032872
Perceived speed of moving lines depends on orientation, length, speed and luminance.Q52391311
Moving stimuli define the shape of stationary chromatic patterns.Q53767749
Interaction between colour and motion in human visionQ58972763
Illusory reversal of visual depth and movement during changes of contrastQ67280376
Human speed perception is contrast dependentQ67596635
Illusory continuous motion from oscillating positive-negative patterns: implications for motion perceptionQ69036885
Color and luminance share a common motion pathwayQ69790675
Perceived rate of movement depends on contrastQ70385862
The influence of spatial frequency and contrast on the perception of moving patternsQ70961043
Perceived velocity of luminance, chromatic and non-fourier stimuli: influence of contrast and temporal frequencyQ71269943
Phi movement as a subtraction processQ71692597
Different motion sensitive units are involved in recovering the direction of moving linesQ72836035
Reversed visual motion and self-sustaining eye oscillationsQ74332962
Footsteps and inchworms: illusions show that contrast affects apparent speedQ74408551
Factors affecting footsteps: contrast can change the apparent speed, amplitude and direction of motionQ80172407
P433issue12
P304page(s)1396-1405
P577publication date2006-12-12
P1433published inJournal of VisionQ6296043
P1476titleExplaining the footsteps, belly dancer, Wenceslas, and kickback illusions
P478volume6

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q90315138A computational mechanism for seeing dynamic deformation
Q41280761Illusory movement of dotted lines
Q27322841Second-Order Footsteps Illusions
Q53500258There and back again: revisiting the on-time effect.

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