A motion aftereffect seen more strongly by the non-adapted eye: evidence of multistage adaptation in visual motion processing

نویسندگان

  • Shin'ya Nishida
  • Hiroshi Ashida
چکیده

We found that the motion aftereffect measured using a directionally ambiguous counterphase grating (flicker MAE) can be stronger when it is measured for the non-adapted eye than when measured for the adapted eye. The monocularly viewed adaptation stimulus was the movement of a missing-fundamental grating (2f+3f motion), for which the movement of the higher-order spatial structure was dominantly perceived, while the first-order structure was physically moving in the opposite direction. For observers who perceived the MAE consistently in the direction opposite to the movement of the higher-order structures, the MAE was larger for the non-adapted eye than for the adapted eye. This finding of 'over-100% transfer' invalidates the standard view that the IOT is a direct measure of the binocularity of the adapted neurones. In addition, the finding provides convincing support for the hypothesis that the flicker MAE reflects adaptation at multiple processing stages

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منابع مشابه

Erratum to “A motion aftereffect seen more strongly by the non-adapted eye: evidence of multistage adaptation in visual motion processing” [Vision Research 41 (2001) 561–570]

Figure 6. Results of the auxiliary experiment with the two authors (SN, HA) and one naı̈ve observer (IM). The test stimulus was a 0.5-c/deg sinusoidal grating (left) or a 0.5-c/deg contrast-modulated grating with a 1.5-c/deg carrier (right). (Top) Circles and squares respectively indicate the duration of the motion aftereffect for the monocular and interocular conditions. Positive values denote ...

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عنوان ژورنال:
  • Vision Research

دوره 41  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2001