A motion aftereffect seen more strongly by the non-adapted eye: evidence of multistage adaptation in visual motion processing
نویسندگان
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
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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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Vision Research
دوره 41 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2001