Time, Space and Form in Vision

[1]  V S Ramachandran,et al.  Apparent Motion of Subjective Surfaces , 1985, Perception.

[2]  Mitsuo Ikeda,et al.  Temporal impulse response , 1986, Vision Research.

[3]  Kenji Kawano,et al.  Parietal neurons with dual sensitivity to real and induced movements of visual target , 1978, Neuroscience Letters.

[4]  S. McKee,et al.  Sequential recruitment in the discrimination of velocity. , 1985, Journal of the Optical Society of America. A, Optics and image science.

[5]  Erik Börjesson,et al.  A vector model for perceived object rotation and translation in space , 1975, Psychological research.

[6]  R E Weller,et al.  Subdivisions and connections of inferior temporal cortex in owl monkeys , 1987, The Journal of comparative neurology.

[7]  Arien Mack,et al.  Perceived movement of the afterimage during eye movements , 1969 .

[8]  J E Cutting,et al.  Visual flow and direction of locomotion. , 1985, Science.

[9]  R. M. Siegel,et al.  Encoding of spatial location by posterior parietal neurons. , 1985, Science.

[10]  N. Yakimoff,et al.  Deterioration of vision due to contour shift over the retina during eye movements , 1975, Vision Research.

[11]  V. Ramachandran,et al.  Visual inertia in apparent motion , 1987, Vision Research.

[12]  S. Anstis The perception of apparent movement. , 1980, Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences.

[13]  S Ullman,et al.  Parallel and serial processes in motion detection. , 1987, Science.

[14]  Ralph Linsker,et al.  Self-organization in a perceptual network , 1988, Computer.

[15]  V. S. Ramachandran,et al.  Extrapolation of motion path in human visual perception , 1983, Vision Research.

[16]  D H Kelly Visual processing of moving stimuli. , 1985, Journal of the Optical Society of America. A, Optics and image science.

[17]  J. N. P. Rawlins,et al.  Fornix-fimbria section and the partial reinforcement extinction effect , 2004, Experimental Brain Research.

[18]  M. H. Kelly,et al.  Explorations of representational momentum , 1987, Cognitive Psychology.

[19]  R N Shepard,et al.  Shape, orientation, and apparent rotational motion. , 1981, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[20]  H. Wilson A model for direction selectivity in threshold motion perception , 2004, Biological Cybernetics.

[21]  D Marr,et al.  Directional selectivity and its use in early visual processing , 1981, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological Sciences.

[22]  Wolf Singer,et al.  Temporal integration in the visual system: Influence of temporal dispersion on figure-ground discrimination , 1986, Vision Research.

[23]  Andrew B. Watson Apparent motion occurs only between similar spatial frequencies , 1986, Vision Research.

[24]  E H Adelson,et al.  Spatiotemporal energy models for the perception of motion. , 1985, Journal of the Optical Society of America. A, Optics and image science.

[25]  Drake R. Bradley,et al.  The effect of smooth tracking and saccadic eye movements on the perception of size: The shrinking circle illusion , 1975, Vision Research.

[26]  A J Ahumada,et al.  Model of human visual-motion sensing. , 1985, Journal of the Optical Society of America. A, Optics and image science.

[27]  Fred Attneave,et al.  Apparent movement and the what-where connection. , 1974 .

[28]  A. Stoper,et al.  Metacontrast and paracontrast suppression of a contourless area , 1978, Vision Research.

[29]  R. W. Ditchburn The function of small saccades , 1980, Vision Research.

[30]  E. Strelow What is needed for a theory of mobility: direct perception and cognitive maps--lessons from the blind. , 1985, Psychological review.

[31]  Mortimer Mishkin,et al.  Mapping the primate visual system with [2-14C]deoxyglucose. , 1982, Science.

[32]  V S Ramachandran,et al.  Kinetic Occlusion by Apparent Movement , 1985, Perception.

[33]  J. Freyd Dynamic mental representations. , 1987, Psychological review.

[34]  H. Wallach Perceiving a stable environment when one moves. , 1987, Annual review of psychology.

[35]  Stuart Anstis,et al.  Entrained path deflection in apparent motion , 1986, Vision Research.

[36]  R. Haber,et al.  The psychology of visual perception , 1973 .

[37]  P. Thompson Discrimination of moving gratings at and above detection threshold , 1983, Vision Research.

[38]  David C. Plaut,et al.  Visual Recognition of Simple Objects by a Connection Network. , 1984 .

[39]  Marc Green,et al.  Inhibition and facilitation of apparent motion by real motion , 1983, Vision Research.

[40]  A. J. Mistlin,et al.  Visual analysis of body movements by neurones in the temporal cortex of the macaque monkey: A preliminary report , 1985, Behavioural Brain Research.

[41]  Tomaso Poggio,et al.  Computational vision and regularization theory , 1985, Nature.

[42]  H. Leibowitz,et al.  A revised analysis of the role of efference in motion perception. , 1985, Perception.

[43]  R J Jagacinski,et al.  Quantifying the cognitive trajectories of extrapolated movements. , 1983, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[44]  Bruno G. Breitmeyer,et al.  Stationary patterns suppress the perception of stroboscopic motion , 1985, Vision Research.

[45]  D Kleinfeld,et al.  Sequential state generation by model neural networks. , 1986, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[46]  Jon Driver,et al.  Visual search for a conjunction of movement and form is parallel , 1988, Nature.

[47]  J. Maunsell,et al.  Visual processing in monkey extrastriate cortex. , 1987, Annual review of neuroscience.

[48]  P. H. Schiller The central visual system , 1986, Vision Research.

[49]  G. Johansson Visual perception of biological motion and a model for its analysis , 1973 .

[50]  Alexander H. Wertheim,et al.  Tutorials on motion perception , 1982 .

[51]  R. Wurtz,et al.  Enhancement of visual responses in monkey striate cortex and frontal eye fields. , 1976, Journal of neurophysiology.

[52]  Suzanne P. McKee,et al.  Colliding targets: Evidence for spatial localization within the motion system , 1985, Vision Research.

[53]  R. Sekuler,et al.  Hysteresis in the perception of motion direction as evidence for neural cooperativity , 1986, Nature.

[54]  O J Braddick,et al.  Low-level and high-level processes in apparent motion. , 1980, Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences.

[55]  A Pantle,et al.  A multistable movement display: evidence for two separate motion systems in human vision. , 1976, Science.

[56]  H. Barlow The Twelfth Bartlett Memorial Lecture: The Role of Single Neurons in the Psychology of Perception , 1985, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology.

[57]  Claude L. Fennema,et al.  Velocity determination in scenes containing several moving objects , 1979 .

[58]  V S Ramachandran,et al.  Low Spatial Frequencies Dominate Apparent Motion , 1983, Perception.

[59]  J T Todd,et al.  Visual information about moving objects. , 1981, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[60]  P. A. Kolers,et al.  Shape and color in apparent motion , 1976, Vision Research.

[61]  Barbara J. Winterson,et al.  Microsaccades during finely guided visuomotor tasks , 1976, Vision Research.

[62]  W. R. Levick,et al.  The retina — from molecules to networks , 1986, Trends in Neurosciences.

[63]  R A Finke,et al.  Implied velocity and acceleration induce transformations of visual memory. , 1986, Journal of experimental psychology. General.

[64]  V. S. Ramachandran,et al.  Perception of apparent motion by commissurotomy patients , 1986, Nature.

[65]  V. Ramachandran,et al.  Motion capture anisotropy , 1987, Vision Research.

[66]  P A Kolers,et al.  Figural change in apparent motion. , 1971, Journal of experimental psychology.

[67]  Leon Festinger,et al.  Interaction of perceptually monitored and unmonitored efferent commands for smooth pursuit eye movements , 1978, Vision Research.

[68]  J. T. Petersik,et al.  The Effects of Spatial and Temporal Factors on the Perception of Stroboscopic Rotation Simulations , 1980, Perception.

[69]  Naomi Weisstein,et al.  The effect of perceived depth and connectedness on metacontrast functions , 1984, Vision Research.

[70]  J. van Santen,et al.  Elaborated Reichardt detectors. , 1985, Journal of the Optical Society of America. A, Optics and image science.

[71]  R. J. Watt,et al.  Effect of motion sweep duration and number of stations upon interpolation in discontinuous motion , 1982, Vision Research.

[72]  T. L. Harrington,et al.  Neural mechanisms of space vision in the parietal association cortex of the monkey , 1985, Vision Research.

[73]  G Johansson,et al.  Spatio-temporal differentiation and integration in visual motion perception , 1976, Psychological research.

[74]  G. H. Jacobs Cones and opponency , 1986, Vision Research.

[75]  Jerome A. Feldman,et al.  Connectionist models and parallelism in high level vision , 1985, Comput. Vis. Graph. Image Process..

[76]  John H. R. Maunsell,et al.  Physiological Evidence for Two Visual Subsystems , 1987 .

[77]  F. C. Volkmann Human visual suppression , 1986, Vision Research.

[78]  B. C. Motter,et al.  Functional properties of parietal visual neurons: mechanisms of directionality along a single axis , 1987, The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience.

[79]  D. D. Hoffman,et al.  The interpretation of biological motion , 1982, Biological Cybernetics.

[80]  Barbara O'connell,et al.  Scripts and Scraps: The Development of Sequential Understanding. , 1985 .

[81]  S. Kosslyn Seeing and imagining in the cerebral hemispheres: a computational approach. , 1987, Psychological review.

[82]  O. Braddick A short-range process in apparent motion. , 1974, Vision research.

[83]  R. Shapley,et al.  Cat and monkey retinal ganglion cells and their visual functional roles , 1986, Trends in Neurosciences.

[84]  S. Ullman,et al.  A model for the temporal organization of X- and Y-type receptive fields in the primate retina , 2004, Biological Cybernetics.

[85]  Tomaso Poggio,et al.  Computations in the vertebrate retina: gain enhancement, differentiation and motion discrimination , 1986, Trends in Neurosciences.

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

[87]  Gerald Westheimer,et al.  Physiological optics during the first quarter-century of Vision research , 1986, Vision Research.

[88]  B Julesz,et al.  "Where" and "what" in vision. , 1985, Science.

[89]  Dana H. Ballard,et al.  Cortical connections and parallel processing: Structure and function , 1986, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[90]  W. Newsome,et al.  Directional pursuit deficits following lesions of the foveal representation within the superior temporal sulcus of the macaque monkey. , 1987, Journal of neurophysiology.

[91]  Stuart Anstis,et al.  Figure-ground segregation modulates apparent motion , 1986, Vision Research.

[92]  D. G. Green,et al.  The search for the site of visual adaptation , 1986, Vision Research.

[93]  H Collewijn,et al.  Human fixation and pursuit in normal and open‐loop conditions: effects of central and peripheral retinal targets. , 1986, The Journal of physiology.

[94]  Mark A. Z. Dippé,et al.  Antialiasing through stochastic sampling , 1985, SIGGRAPH.

[95]  J. Farrell,et al.  Visual transformations underlying apparent movement , 1983, Perception & psychophysics.

[96]  S. McKee A local mechanism for differential velocity detection , 1981, Vision Research.

[97]  L E Arend,et al.  What is psychophysically perfect image stabilization? Do perfectly stabilized images always disappear? , 1986, Journal of the Optical Society of America. A, Optics and image science.

[98]  R. J. Watt,et al.  Spatial frequency interference effects and interpolation in vernier acuity , 1984, Vision Research.

[99]  Jon A. Webb,et al.  Static Analysis of Moving Jointed Objects , 1980, AAAI.

[100]  W. Newsome,et al.  Motion selectivity in macaque visual cortex. III. Psychophysics and physiology of apparent motion. , 1986, Journal of neurophysiology.

[101]  Andy Hon Wai Chun,et al.  A Representation for Temporal Sequence and Duration in Massively Parallel Networks , 1986, AAAI.

[102]  D. Burr,et al.  Seeing objects in motion , 1986, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological Sciences.

[103]  P. Lennie Parallel visual pathways: A review , 1980, Vision Research.

[104]  J. Freyd,et al.  The mental representation of movement when static stimuli are viewed , 1983, Perception & psychophysics.

[105]  Peter Thompson,et al.  The coding of velocity of movement in the human visual system , 1984, Vision Research.

[106]  E. Renzi Disorders of space exploration and cognition , 1982 .

[107]  R L Gregory,et al.  Movement Nulling: For Heterochromatic Photometry and Isolating Channels for ‘Real’ and ‘Apparent’ Motion , 1985, Perception.

[108]  J J Gibson,et al.  What gives rise to the perception of motion? , 1968, Psychological review.

[109]  J. Feldman Four frames suffice: A provisional model of vision and space , 1985, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[110]  T. Poggio,et al.  A synaptic mechanism possibly underlying directional selectivity to motion , 1978, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological Sciences.

[111]  S. Runeson,et al.  Kinematic specification of dynamics as an informational basis for person and action perception: Expe , 1983 .

[112]  K Prazdny Three-Dimensional Structure from Long-Range Apparent Motion , 1986, Perception.

[113]  David R. Williams,et al.  Seeing through the photoreceptor mosaic , 1986, Trends in Neurosciences.

[114]  S. Ullman The Interpretation of Visual Motion , 1979 .

[115]  R. F. Rashid,et al.  Towards a system for the interpretation of moving light displays , 1980, IEEE Transactions on Pattern Analysis and Machine Intelligence.

[116]  F A Miles,et al.  Short-latency ocular following responses of monkey. II. Dependence on a prior saccadic eye movement. , 1986, Journal of neurophysiology.

[117]  S. McKee,et al.  Precise velocity discrimination despite random variations in temporal frequency and contrast , 1986, Vision Research.

[118]  S. Anstis,et al.  Effects of Luminance and Contrast on Direction of Ambiguous Apparent Motion , 1985, Perception.

[119]  R N Shepard,et al.  Path-guided apparent motion. , 1983, Science.

[120]  L Chen,et al.  Topological Structure in the Perception of Apparent Motion , 1985, Perception.

[121]  C. A. Burbeck,et al.  Role of local adaptation in the fading of stabilized images. , 1984, Journal of the Optical Society of America. A, Optics and image science.

[122]  H. Sperling,et al.  Spectral sensitivity, intense spectral light studies and the color receptor mosaic of primates , 1986, Vision Research.

[123]  G J Andersen,et al.  Perception of self-motion: psychophysical and computational approaches. , 1986, Psychological bulletin.

[124]  K Prazdny,et al.  What Variables Control (Long-Range) Apparent Motion? , 1986, Perception.

[125]  E. J. Morris,et al.  Visual motion processing and sensory-motor integration for smooth pursuit eye movements. , 1987, Annual review of neuroscience.

[126]  Curtis L. Baker,et al.  Eccentricity-dependent scaling of the limits for short-range apparent motion perception , 1985, Vision Research.

[127]  J. Allman,et al.  Stimulus specific responses from beyond the classical receptive field: neurophysiological mechanisms for local-global comparisons in visual neurons. , 1985, Annual review of neuroscience.

[128]  W. Newsome,et al.  Motion selectivity in macaque visual cortex. II. Spatiotemporal range of directional interactions in MT and V1. , 1986, Journal of neurophysiology.

[129]  Andrew M. Derrington,et al.  Errors in direction-of-motion discrimination with complex stimuli , 1987, Vision Research.

[130]  Jin Luo,et al.  Computing motion using analog and binary resistive networks , 1988, Computer.

[131]  M Green,et al.  Correspondence matching in apparent motion: evidence for three-dimensional spatial representation. , 1986, Science.

[132]  S. McKee,et al.  The detection of motion in the peripheral visual field , 1984, Vision Research.

[133]  H. Barlow,et al.  The mechanism of directionally selective units in rabbit's retina. , 1965, The Journal of physiology.

[134]  D. Burr,et al.  Spatial and temporal selectivity of the human motion detection system , 1985, Vision Research.

[135]  A. J. Mistlin,et al.  Visual neurones responsive to faces , 1987, Trends in Neurosciences.

[136]  D. Burr,et al.  Summation of Target and Mask Metacontrast Stimuli , 1984, Perception.

[137]  T. Wiesel,et al.  Functional architecture of macaque monkey visual cortex , 1977 .

[138]  David J. Fleet,et al.  Spatiotemporal inseparability in early visual processing , 1985, Biological Cybernetics.

[139]  R. Eckmiller Neural control of pursuit eye movements. , 1987, Physiological reviews.

[140]  W. Reichardt,et al.  Autocorrelation, a principle for the evaluation of sensory information by the central nervous system , 1961 .

[141]  Michael von Grünau,et al.  Form information is necessary for the perception of motion , 1979, Vision Research.

[142]  V. S. Ramachandran,et al.  Perception of illusory occlusion in apparent motion , 1986, Vision Research.

[143]  C Bonnet,et al.  Visual Motion Detection Models: Features and Frequency Filters , 1977, Perception.

[144]  E I Knudsen,et al.  Computational maps in the brain. , 1987, Annual review of neuroscience.

[145]  V. S. Ramachandran,et al.  Interaction between colour and motion in human vision , 1987, Nature.

[146]  P. A. Kolers Aspects of motion perception , 1972 .

[147]  Arien Mack,et al.  Is perceived motion a stimulus for smooth pursuit , 1982, Vision Research.

[148]  John L. Barbur,et al.  Subthreshold addition of real and apparent motion , 1981, Vision Research.

[149]  R. Desimone,et al.  Selective attention gates visual processing in the extrastriate cortex. , 1985, Science.