Contrast affects flicker and speed perception differently.

scientific article published in May 1997

Contrast affects flicker and speed perception differently. is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1016/S0042-6989(96)00302-1
P698PubMed publication ID9205717

P2093author name stringP Thompson
L S Stone
P2860cites workShort-latency ocular following responses of monkey. I. Dependence on temporospatial properties of visual inputQ34190851
Spatiotemporal energy models for the perception of motionQ34197512
Spatial and temporal contrast sensitivity of neurones in areas 17 and 18 of the cat's visual cortexQ39214404
Motion selectivity and the contrast-response function of simple cells in the visual cortexQ41146761
Model for the extraction of image flowQ48224111
Discrimination of differences in speed and flicker rate depends on directionally selective mechanismsQ48240533
Striate cortex of monkey and cat: contrast response functionQ48924596
A psychophysically motivated model for two-dimensional motion perceptionQ52418100
Visual cortical receptive fields in monkey and cat: spatial and temporal phase transfer function.Q52546331
Speed estimates from grating patches are not contrast-normalized.Q52888812
Two-dimensional spatial and spatial-frequency selectivity of motion-sensitive mechanisms in human visionQ60213809
Spatial and temporal selectivity of the human motion detection systemQ60213895
Human speed perception is contrast dependentQ67596635
Coding of image contrast in central visual pathways of the macaque monkeyQ68744742
Precise velocity discrimination despite random variations in temporal frequency and contrastQ69581803
Model of human visual-motion sensingQ70062189
Perceived rate of movement depends on contrastQ70385862
The relationship between response amplitude and contrast for cat striate cortical neuronesQ71046620
Perceived velocity of luminance, chromatic and non-fourier stimuli: influence of contrast and temporal frequencyQ71269943
Spatial frequency analysis in early visual processingQ72430999
The optimal motion stimulusQ72636240
Visual cortex neurons in monkey and cat: contrast response nonlinearities and stimulus selectivityQ105584804
P433issue10
P304page(s)1255-1260
P577publication date1997-05-01
P1433published inVision ResearchQ1307852
P1476titleContrast affects flicker and speed perception differently.
P478volume37

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q34700127Are stripes beneficial? Dazzle camouflage influences perceived speed and hit rates
Q89700478But Still It Moves: Static Image Statistics Underlie How We See Motion
Q53136552Cortical correlates of human motion perception biases.
Q55118671Dazzle coloration and prey movement.
Q50510309Effects of flicker rate, complexity, and color combinations of Chinese characters and backgrounds on visual search performance with varying flicker types.
Q36909842Estimating target speed from the population response in visual area MT.
Q80172407Factors affecting footsteps: contrast can change the apparent speed, amplitude and direction of motion
Q47726940Icon flickering, flicker rate, and color combinations of an icon's symbol/background in visual search performance
Q48247171Motion fading is driven by perceived, not actual angular velocity
Q46291909Moving objects appear to slow down at low contrasts
Q42352750Perceived Duration Increases with Contrast, but Only a Little
Q37374811Perceived Speed of Compound Stimuli Is Moderated by Component Contrast, Not Overall Pattern Contrast
Q90673165Spatial attention alters visual appearance
Q53500258There and back again: revisiting the on-time effect.

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