Using metamers to explore motion perception.

scientific article published in January 1991

Using metamers to explore motion perception. is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1016/0042-6989(91)90118-O
P698PubMed publication ID2017888

P2093author name stringD Williams
R Sekuler
S Tweten
P433issue2
P304page(s)275-286
P577publication date1991-01-01
P1433published inVision ResearchQ1307852
P1476titleUsing metamers to explore motion perception.
P478volume31

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
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Q73614331Different populations of neurons contribute to the detection and discrimination of visual motion
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Q42212573Effects of retinal eccentricity and acuity on global-motion processing
Q52889785Evidence that luminant and equiluminant motion signals are integrated by directionally selective mechanisms.
Q77793002Global motion processing is not tuned for binocular disparity
Q77330951Independent speed-tuned global-motion systems
Q72620068Magnitude of luminance modulation specifies amplitude of perceived movement
Q44331831Metamers in the haptic perception of heaviness and moveableness
Q45367286Perceived global flow direction reveals local vector weighting by luminance
Q48545039Perceptual costs for motion transparency evaluated by two performance measures
Q27025634Probing the functions of contextual modulation by adapting images rather than observers
Q82791401Pushing the limits of transparent-motion detection with binocular disparity
Q73505080Seeing multiple directions of motion-physiology and psychophysics
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Q51994954The effects of aging on motion detection and direction identification.
Q43785050The human visual system averages speed information
Q76392354The invariance of directional tuning with contrast and coherence
Q36552817The whole is faster than its parts: evidence for temporally independent attention to distinct spatial locations

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