Volume 1, Number 3, Abstracts 1a-483a doi:10.1167/1.3 http://journalofvision.org/1/3/ ISSN 1534-7362
Vision Sciences Society Meeting, 2001: Abstracts
The Vision Sciences Society Meeting was held May 4-8, 2001, in Sarasota, FL. The meeting was organized by Ken Nakayama and Tom Sanocki. The following are the abstracts of that meeting. ARVO holds the copyright to Journal of Vision, Vol.1, No. 3, but not to the individual abstracts in that issue. ARVO has published these abstracts as a service to the vision science community.

1
Saunders & Knill
Response to perturbations of visual feedback during reaching movements
2
Andersen, Hahn, & Saidpour
Static scene information and the perception of locomotion
3
Crowell, Todd, & Bingham
Distinct perceptual representations for visually-guided reaches
4
Durgin, Fox, & Kane
Visual contributions to locomotor recalibration
5
Ooi, May, Gunther, & He
Prism adaptation effects on absolute distance judgment
6
Glennerster, Hansard, & Fitzgibbon
How could ego-centric location be defined neurally?
7
Mitroff & Simons
A lack of confidence in implicit change detection
8
Beck & Levin
The role of beliefs about intention in producing change blindness blindness
9
Vogel & Luck
Quartering the spotlight: Spatial properties of selective storage in visual working memory
10
Levin
Visual metacognitions underlying change blindness blindness and estimates of picture memory
11
Angelone & Levin
Change blindness and modes of processing: Are representation and comparison independent?
12
Wayand & Levin
Ignoring a merciless act
13
Silverman & Mack
Priming from change blindness
14
Murakami
The flash-lag effect in random motion reveals distributed differential latency between the flash and motion
15
Watanabe, Nijhawan, & Shimojo
Position capture by object motion through a slit
16
Eagleman & Sejnowski
The flash-lag illusion: distinguishing a spatial from a temporal effect, and why that matters for interpreting visual physiology
17
Stoet & Snyder
Task preparation in monkeys
18
Rossi, Bichot, Desimone, & Ungerleider
Top-down, but not bottom-up: Deficits in target selection in monkeys with prefrontal lesions
19
Priebe, Cassanello, & Lisberger
The speed tuning of single units in macaque visual area MT depends on spatial form and contrast
20
Droll, Bisley, & Pasternak
The delay activity of some MT neurons may signal the remembered direction of motion
21
Bilodeau & Cavanagh
Disintegration of shapes in peripherally viewed rotating displays
22
Lindner, Haarmeier, & Thier
Motion perception during smooth pursuit eye movements: object and background motion perception depend on different non-retinal signals on eye velocity
23
Anderson, Wu, & Dobkins
Tuning of infant directional mechanisms
24
Aslin, Blake, & Chun
A dissociation in the transfer of perceptual learning based on visual temporal structure
25
Slemmer, Kirkham, & Johnson
Visual statistical learning in infancy
26
Mednick, Luskin, Cantero, Atienza, Nakayama, & Stickgold
Napping necessary for within-day perceptual learning
27
Liu, Lu, & Qian
Learning motion discrimination without MT
28
Abbey, Eckstein, & Shimozaki
The efficiency of perceptual learning in a visual detection task
29
Koyama, Harner, & Watanabe
Different mechanisms for the learning of motion detection vs. the learning of motion direction discrimination
30
Sa'ry, Xu, Shostak, Royal, Schall, & Casagrande
Behavioral relevance influences LGN neurons of macaque monkey in the absence of receptive field stimulation
31
Roelfsema & Spekreijse
The representation of erroneously perceived stimuli in the primary visual cortex
32
Lamme, Zipser, & Spekreijse
Masking interrupts figure-ground signals in V1
33
Boynton
Orientation-specific pattern adaptation measured with event-related fMRI
34
Touryan, Lau, & Dan
Nonlinear analysis of complex cells in cat visual cortex
35
Smith, Bair, Cavanaugh, & Movshon
Latency of inhibition from inside and outside the classical receptive field in macaque V1 neurons
36
Yen & Gray
Properties of contour integration in a macaque monkey
37
Rubin & Albert
Real-world scenes can be easily recognized from their edge-detected renditions: Just add motion!
38
Vessel, Biederman, Lee, & Subramaniam
Contour grouping into L-vertices depends on contrast polarity: Evidence for the incorporation of image statistics into mechanisms of perceptual grouping
39
Koenderink, van Doorn, Kappers, & Todd
Physical and mental viewpoints in pictorial relief
40
Todd & Oomes
The perception of 3D shape from surface contours
41
Sauer, Braunstein, Andersen, & Bian
Judged shape of ground plane regions in realistic 3-D scenes
42
Sinha & Torralba
Role of low-level mechanisms in brightness perception
43
Fleming, Dror, & Adelson
Surface reflectance estimation under unknown natural illumination
44
Zdravkovic & Gilchrist
Anchoring illumination
45
Gilchrist
Recent applications of the anchoring approach
46
Gosselin, Bonnar, Paul, & Schyns
"Superstitious" perceptions to depict pure internal object representations
47
Koning & van Lier
Differential effects of 2-D versus 3-D connectedness on object transformations
48
Lotto & Purves
An empirical explanation of the Chubb Illusion
49
Herzog & Fahle
First is best
50
Grossberg
How visual percepts emerge from complementary brain dynamics
51
Hill
An investigation of bootstrap interval coverage and sampling efficiency in psychometric functions
52
Murray, Bennett, & Sekuler
No pointwise nonlinearity in shape discrimination
53
Shimojo & Kamitani
Fillin-in induced by high-contrast edge adaptation
54
Chong & Treisman
Representation of statistical properties
55
Palomo & Watanabe
Competitive recruitment in visual form representation
56
Suzuki & Grabowecky
Rapid temporal coincidence of spatially separated shapes can be resolved using sustained emergent percepts
57
Hurvich
Some little known aspects of Ewald Hering's scientific contributions
58
Shady & MacLeod
Desaturation of gratings and flicker near and above the resolution limit
59
Brown & Lindsey
The color blue: A psychophysical explanation for a linguistic phenomenon
60
Purves & Lotto
Explanation of some major features of color perception
61
Troscianko, Parraga, & Tolhurst
Is color vision good for picking fruit?
62
Longere, Kraft, & Brainard
Bayesian model of human color constancy
63
Fine & MacLeod
Visual segmentation based on the luminance and chromaticity statistics of natural scenes
64
Buchsbaum & Tailor
The elementary structure of natural color images and its possible neurophysiological correlates
65
Caywood, Willmore, & Tolhurst
The color tuning of independent components of natural scenes matches V1 simple cells
66
Blake, Palmeri, Marois, & Whetsell
Visual binding of synesthetic colors to achromatic forms
67
Ramachandran & Hubbard
Neural cross wiring and synesthesia
68
Poggel, Kasten, Mueller-Oehring, & Sabel
Focusing attention on the visual field border: Short-term and long-term effects of visuo-spatial cueing in patients with visual field defects
69
Lleras & Moore
Attentional modulation of Troxler fading
70
Yeshurun & Levy
The effects of spatial attention on temporal resolution
71
Michael, Boucart, Degreef, & Leys
The thalamus interrupts top-down attentional control
72
Chen
On perceptual load, size of the attentional window, and distractor interference
73
Siegel, Phinney, Turner, & Jando
Topographic map for visual space in association parietal cortex of behaving monkey
74
Carrasco & Loula
Effects of selective adaptation on texture segmentation and its interaction with covert attention.
75
Levi, Klein, & Hariharan
Foveal crowding is just "good old" contrast masking, but peripheral crowding is more
76
Talgar & Carrasco
The effects of attention in texture segmentation in the lower and upper visual fields
77
Atchley, Grobe, & Fields
The effect of smoking on sensory and attentional masking
78
Cameron, Tai, & Carrasco
Effects of transient covert attention on the psychometric function
79
Williams, Yeshurun, & Carrasco
Masked or not, covert attention enhances spatial resolution: Support for signal enhancement
80
Paul, Giaschi, Cavanagh, & Cline
Attention deficits in children with anisometropic amblyopia
81
Schneider & Bavelier
Exogenous cueing and visual latency: attention, response bias or sensory facilitation?
82
Tse, Sheinberg, & Logothetis
Spatial attention elongates both toward and away from an exogenous flash
83
Eckstein, Shimozaki, & Abbey
The footsteps of attention in the Posner paradigm revealed by classification images
84
Tsuchiya, Rees, Braun, & Koch
Attentional modulation of visual motion perception using novel wavelet stimuli
85
Sohn, Vidnyanszky, Blaser, & Papathomas
Attention to one component of bivectorial transparent motion strongly inhibits the processing of the unattended component
86
Alais
Motion repulsion: Effects of noise and attention
87
Tsujimura & Zaidi
Higher sensitivity for relative motion is due to position tracking
88
Del Vecchio, von Grunau, & Faubert
Attentional selection of first- and second-order motion stimuli
89
Rezec & Dobkins
Sensory- and attention- based visual field asymmetries for motion and orientation discrimination
90
Reeves & DeCaro
The visual recognition of rotated shapes
91
Nilson, Joneleit, Smith, & Hoffman
Color and part
92
Nederhouser & Mangini
A translation between S1 and S2 eliminates costs of changes in the direction of illumination in object matching
93
Hunt & J.Bassi
The effects of blur on neuropsychological tests in young and old adults
94
Young & Wasserman
Visual variability discrimination in the pigeon is not determined by spatial regularity
95
Pins, Boucart, Meyer, & Jack
Automatic object identification in a peceptual matching paradigm : An fMRI study
96
Bravo & Farid
Top-down and bottom-up processes for object segmentation
97
Wagemans, Panis, De Winter, & Op de Beeck
Perceptual and conceptual priming in picture identification on the basis of contour fragments with specific curvature properties
98
Graf
Analog topological transformations in basic level object recognition
99
Coltheart, Mondy, & Moore
Effects of repetition on the report of RSVP sequences of familiar and novel objects
100
MacKeben
Enhancement of peripheral letter recognition by modifying typographic features
101
Zaenen, Wagemans, & Vogels
Learning to discriminate highly similar three-dimensional objects: Qualitative versus quantitative differences and viewpoint (in)dependency
102
Takarae & Levin
Is the pen mightier than the pen-axe? Correct and incorrect conjunctions of parts in visual search for everyday objects
103
Woodman & Luck
Serial deployment of attention during visual search
104
Franconeri & Simons
Disoccluding and looming objects capture attention
105
Rauschenberger & Yantis
What counts as an object in the new-object hypothesis of attentional capture?
106
Maljkovic
Short-term priming for segmenting features modulates attentional capacity and results in dynamic shift of the locus of selection
107
McCarley, Kramer, Scialfa, & Colcombe
Attentional priming in visual search: Age-based differences in feature priming
108
Leber & Egeth
Exploring mode selection in visual search
109
Horowitz & Thornton
Efficient memory for targets in visuomotor sequential search task
110
Seiffert & Treisman
Target recognition in visual search
111
Folk, Remington, Lachter, & Ruthruff
Top-down gating of preattentive featural processing in multidimensional objects
112
Palix, Viaud-Delmon, Michel, & Leonards
Cortical dynamics of attention during visual search: An event-related potential study
113
Kontsevich
Serial search is certainly serial
114
Kristjansson, Wang, & Nakayama
The role of priming in conjunction search
115
Sheth & Shimojo
Color and orientation pop-outs differentially affect discrimination
116
Yokoi & Uchikawa
Categorical color perception influences heterochromatic visual search
117
Donnelly, Parton, & Usher
Detecting contour targets amongst temporally segmented and non-segmented distractors
118
Davis, Shikano, Peterson, Keyes, & Shook
An SDT psychophysical approach to visual search and divided attention
119
Carlson & Shomstein
Disambiguating strategic effects in visual search
120
Baldassi & Verghese
Effect of attention on a search task with orientation noise
121
Butcher, Oliva, & Wolfe
Things fall apart: The transience of binding in visual search
122
Ostrovsky & Sinha
The role of 3D perspective in visual search
123
Oliva, Wolfe, & Arsenio
Memory as an internal vision
124
Sanocki, Sellers, & Mittelstadt
High-capacity visual short term memory for layout
125
Xu
Limitations in object-based feature encoding in visual short-term memory
126
Rensink
Grouping in visual short-term memory
127
Cai & Schlag
A new form of illusory conjunction between color and shape
128
Landman, Spekreijse, & Lamme
A neural correlate of change blindness in V1
129
Cavanagh & Barton
Lights from beyond the visual field are not seen
130
Tong & Engel
Interocular rivalry revealed in the human cortical blind-spot representation
131
Kreiman, Fried, & Koch
Single neuron responses in humans during binocular rivalry and flash suppression
132
Gray
How do baseball batters use "where" and "when" information?
133
Vishton, Tokuda, Simons, & Cutting
Differential use of high spatial frequency information for heading perception judgment and heading-mediated driving
134
Kearns, Warren, Tarr, & Duchon
Does optic flow contribute to human path integration?
135
Cunningham, Kreher, von der Heyde, & Buelthoff
Do cause and effect need to be temporally continuous? Learning to compensate for delayed vestibular feedback
136
Readinger, Chatziastros, Cunningham, Cutting, & Buelthoff
Gaze-eccentricity effects on automobile driving performance - or - Going where you look
137
Harrison, Warren, & Tarr
The geometry of "cognitive maps": Metric vs. ordinal structure
138
Hall & Philbeck
Do we update locations more poorly as they pass behind us?
139
Grosjean & Mordkoff
On the influence of motor preparation on perceptual processing
140
Cohn, Han, & Van
How a mouse can gauge the quality of inaction
141
Creem
Spatial updating after imagined self and object movement: translation is similar to rotation
142
Flückiger, Baumberger, & Cutting
Virtual driving performances from different eye-heights
143
Kopinska & Harris
Perceptual space coded in body coordinates
144
Sibigtroth & Banks
Vestibular stimulation in heading estimation
145
Maonsson
Suppressive mechanisms in contour integration
146
Kovacs, Lukacs, Feher, Racsmany, & Pleh
Contour integration deficit in Williams Syndrome children
147
Beaudot
Temporal asynchrony in contour integration: A retelling of the fable of "The Hare and the Tortoise"
148
Popple & Li
Testing a V1 model --- Perceptual biases and saliency effects
149
Li & Zaidi
Phase spectra are irrelevant in 3D shape from natural textures
150
Motoyoshi & Nishida
Spatiotempoal interaction in detection of texture orientation modulations
151
Maddess & Nagai
Discriminating isotrigon textures
152
Wilson, Switkes, & De Valois
Effects of contrast variations on the perception of glass patterns
153
Rainville & Makous
The spatial tuning of perceived temporal synchrony
154
Griffiths & Zaidi
Looking through Ames' window
155
Benton, Johnston, & McOwan
Computational modeling of non Fourier motion
156
Scott-Samuel & Hess
What does the Ternus display tell us about motion processing in human vision?
157
Hupé & Rubin
Dynamics of bi-stable perception of plaids
158
Lankheet
Spatiotemporal tuning of motion coherence detection in cats.
159
Ashida & Yamagishi
Movement-related positional bias for luminance and colour motion
160
Meese & Anderson
Spiral mechanisms are required to account for summation of complex motion components
161
Vidnyanszky, Blaser, & Papathomas
An explanation for unidirectional motion aftereffects following adaptation to bivectorial transparent motion
162
Verstraten & van Wezel
Nulling the motion aftereffect of transparent motion
163
Lappin, Tadin, & Gaddy
Detecting spatial patterns of motion energy
164
Punzel, Yonas, & Schacter
Grouping and detection of global apparent motion
165
Mukai, Hibino, & Watanabe
The likelihood of motion capture is more strongly determined by the degree of color contrast of adjacent gratings than by the degree of luminance contrast
166
Yu & Craft
Do barriers influence motion correspondence?
167
Thomas, Cumming, & Parker
Modelling the relative disparity selectivity of V2 neurons
168
Li
Modeling pre-attentive stereo grouping by intracortical interactions in early visual cortex
169
Zucker
Hypercolumn-based stereo correspondence
170
Ono, Mapp, & Howard
The cyclopean eye in vision: The new and old data continue to hit you right between the eyes
171
Erkelens & van Ee
Evidence for two binocular colour mechanisms
172
Bridge, Cumming, & Parker
Psychophysical evidence against the use of orientation disparity in the perception of slant.
173
Sobel & Blake
Does context influence a rival target's escape from suppression?
174
Ito & Sato
The chromatic contribution to the human stereo system measured with a depth-canceling technique
175
Adams & Mamassian
Bayesian slant estimation
176
Wichmann, Willems, Rosas, & Wagemans
Perception of planar shapes in depth
177
Wilcox & Duke
Spatial scaling of 3D surface interpolation
178
Hillis & Banks
Slant adaptation improves slant discrimination
179
Backus & Nolt
Analysis of stereoscopic metamers
180
Forte, Peirce, & Lennie
Binocular integration of partially occluded surfaces
181
Likova, Kontsevich, & Tyler
Providing disparity curvature dramatically enhances localization of sampled luminance profiles
182
Craft & Yu
"Misperception" of stereoscopic structure
183
Lee & Stelmach
Stereoscopic depth perception at high velocities
184
Warren, Fajen, & Belcher
Behavioral dynamics of steering, obstacle avoidance, and route selection
185
Wann & Swapp
Where do we look when we steer and does it matter?
186
Foo, Duchon, Warren, & Tarr
Do humans integrate routes into a "cognitive map"?
187
Fajen & Warren
Interception of moving objects on foot
188
von der Heyde, Riecke, Cunningham, & Bülthoff
No visual dominance for remembered turns - Psychophysical experiments on the integration of visual and vestibular cues in virtual reality
189
Stankiewicz, Legge, & Schlicht
The effect of layout complexity on human and ideal navigation performance
190
Dolomount, Shankar, & Ellard
Estimating time-to-collision: Further investigations of an animal model.
191
Wexler, Lamouret, Panerai, & Droulez
Self-motion and allocentric criteria in spatial vision
192
Bridgeman & Thiem
Limits of the sensorimotor visual system
193
McBeath, Sugar, & Shaffer
Comparison of active versus passive ball catching control algorithms using robotic simulations
194
Culham, DeSouza, Woodward, Kourtzi, Gati, Menon, & Goodale
Visually-guided grasping produces fMRI activation in dorsal but not ventral stream brain areas
195
Matin, Li, Hudson, & Hirsch
Perceptions of elevation and orientation: From the stimulus basis to the cerebral cortex
196
Neri & Heeger
Spatiotemporal mechanisms of feature detection in human vision
197
Pelli, Martelli, & Majaj
How many channels does it take to integrate features?
198
Wu, Kamitani, Maeda, & Shimojo
Interaction of TMS-induced phosphenes and visual stimuli
199
Miller & Kayser
A model for the development of V1 columnar circuitry
200
Brown, Allison, Samonds, & Bonds
Nonlocal origin of response suppression from stimulation outside the classic receptive field in area 17 of the cat
201
Huang, Blau, & Paradiso
Aspects of human detection and discrimination correlate with macaque V1 physiology
202
Bair, Cavanaugh, Smith, & Movshon
Switching between off and on in the macaque visual system
203
Kersten & Schrater
The tuning of vision to natural contours: Straighter is better
204
Adelson & Somers
Straightness, structure, and shadows
205
Kourtzi & Kanwisher
Processing of perceived shape vs. contours in the human lateral occipital complex
206
Ramsden, Hung, & Roe
Is there a substructure of functional organization for illusory contour processing in V2?
207
Kawahara
Local facilitation of information processing in the attentional blink as indexed by the shooting line illusion
208
Mounts, McCarley, Gavett, & Buffan
Localized attentional inhibition within and between objects
209
VanRullen & Koch
The capacity of visual awareness
210
Saiki
Maintenance and transformation of feature conjunctions in visual working memory in a dynamic situation
211
Frieder & Carrasco
Negative priming for unfamiliar shapes occurs under covert attention
212
Gottesman & Gronlund
The distribution of attention and effects on memory for scene expanse
213
Most & Clifford
Set your sights higher: Category-level attentional effects in the detection of unexpected objects
214
Dishon-Berkovits & Treisman
Feature binding: Competing needs in working memory and long term associative learning?
215
Deubel, Wesenick, & Schneider
Evidence for nevelty pop-out in visual working memory
216
Barenholtz & Feldman
Interpretation of part boundaries and the movement of attention
217
Moore, Lleras, & Grosjean
Perception and action under conditions of inattention
218
Lawson, Crewther, Kiely, & Crewther
Development of the attentional blink in relation to cognitive and short-term memory development
219
Yokosawa & Chiba
Robust midstream order deficit requires change of locations
220
Khayat, Spekreijse, & Roelfsema
Remapping of attentional modulation across eye movements in primary visual cortex of the monkey
221
Eccelpoel & Verfaillie
Incidental vs. deliberate coding of object orientation across eye movements
222
May, Flanagan, & Dobie
OKN, ego vection and motion sickness
223
Visco, Stevenson, & Bedell
Saccades alter perceived duration of full field decrement flashes
224
McSorley & Findlay
Spatial frequency interactions and saccade programming
225
Medendorp, Tweed, & Crawford
Modeling spatial updating during head-free gaze shifts
226
Liston & Krauzlis
Effects of varying visual salience on pursuit and saccade decisions
227
Germeys, Panis, & De Graef
Visual stability across saccades: Transsaccadic memory for location of bystander objects
228
Carlson, Covell, & Warapius
The flexible encoding of a saccade target's features
229
McFadden, Shields, & Rounsley
Local accommodation in a lateral eyed bird facilitates seeing simultaneously in two different places in space
230
Aks, Zelinsky, & Sprott
Memory across eye-movements: 1/f Dynamic in visual search
231
Gysen & Verfaillie
Transsaccadic perception of translating objects
232
Grove, Ono, & Kaneko
The bifixation field as a function of viewing distance
233
Niemeier, Crawford, & Tweed
A probabilistic model of transsaccadic integration
234
Dickinson, Calton, & Snyder
Non-spatial motor-specific activations of two distinct regions of posterior parietal cortex (PPC)
235
Mulligan
Luminance-driven delays measured with the Pulfrich effect and the eye movement correlogram
236
Osada & Nagasaka
The effects of limited eye movements on judgments of emotion of band pass filtered faces
237
Chen, Cavanagh, Holzman, & Nakayama
The cues for smooth pursuit eye movements are different at slow and fast motion
238
Edelman, Kristjansson, & Nakayama
Facilitation of saccade target selection by object centered priming
239
Melcher
The build up of scene memory across eye movements
240
Johnston, Clifford, Benton, & McOwan
Why correlation, energy and gradient motion models are not equivalent
241
Quinlan & Culham
Flicker motion aftereffect produces fMRI activation in MT
242
Carlson, Schrater, & He
Functional imaging of visually expanding motion stimuli: Toward a functional anatomy of visual motion processing
243
Gepshtein & Kubovy
The weights of space and time in the perception of visual motion
244
Nichols & Hock
Counterphase sine gratings flicker at the detection threshold but move above the detection threshold
245
Kamiya & Sato
Motion- and luminance- defined patterns elicit qualitatively same but quantitatively different VEPs
246
Mihashi, Shioiri, & Yaguchi
The size and shape of the receptive field of relative motion detector
247
Gilroy & Hock
Counter-changing contrast as the basis for the perception of contrast-defined, single-element apparent motion
248
Cormack & Stevenson
Exploring motion aliasing under steady illumination
249
Geiger, Lorusso, Pesenti, Facoetti, Cattaneo, & Lettvin
Cross-modal perceptual learning as demonstrated in dyslexics
250
Sakano, Kaneko, & Uchikawa
The effect of haptic learning on the integration of disparity and perspective for the dynamic and static slant perception
251
Hairston, Wallace, Stein, Vaughan, & Schirillo
Cross modal bias occurs with perceptual unity of spatially disparate signals
252
Bruno & Bernardis
Dissociating perception and action in Kanizsa's compression Illusion
253
Franz, Thornton, Fahle, & Buelthoff
Representational momentum in the motor system?
254
McConnell, Grudic, Knill, & Kumar
Reach corrections to unnoticed target perturbations
255
Thompson & Dunn
Pointing at the Judd Illusion
256
Hartung, Franz, Kersten, & Buelthoff
Is the motor system affected by the hollow face illusion?
257
Krauzlis & Dill
Ideal-observer analysis of rostral superior colliculus activity during pursuit and saccade decisions
258
Schiller & Tehovnik
Look and see: How the brain moves your eyes about
259
Sommer & Wurtz
A subcortical source of visual input to the frontal eye field
260
Wallman, Khan, Yun, & McFadden
The spatial scale of attention affects adaptation of saccadic gain
261
Hayhoe, Aivar, Mruczek, & Chizk
Memory for spatial structure in saccadic targeting
262
Burr, Ross, & Morrone
Two systems for spatial location during saccades
263
Beutter, Eckstein, & Stone
Correlated saccadic and perceptual decisions in a visual-search detection task reveal spatial-filter overlap
264
Sato, Murthy, Thompson, & Schall
Effects of perceptual load and response interference on target selection in macaque frontal eye field
265
Connolly, Menon, & Goodale
Areas active during a pointing but not a saccade delay are medial to saccade-and-pointing network
266
Bisley & Goldberg
Spatial attention in the monkey is linked to the location of a planned saccade and can be transiently shifted by a flashed distracter
267
Stevenson & Cormack
Contrast interactions imply a second-order basis for relative disparity discrimination
268
Banks
Disparity scaling and correction for inclined surfaces
269
Gillam & Pianta
Relative and absolute stereo slant
270
Bacon & Mamassian
A look through the crooked window: Depth without binocular correspondence
271
Cumming, Prince, & Parker
The range of disparities encoded in primate V1
272
DeAngelis & Uka
MT neurons can account for behavioral performance in a depth discrimination task
273
Qiu, Endo, & von der Heydt
Neural representation of 3-dimensional shape primitives in monkey visual cortex
274
Kraft, Peirce, Forte, Krauskopf, & Lennie
Nonlinear combination of binocular signals in macaque cortex
275
Janssen, Vogels, Liu, & Orban
The representation of vertical and horizontal disparity gradients in macaque inferior temporal cortex
276
Mamassian & Sinha
Apparent motion from apparent lightness
277
Singh, De Kadt, & Anderson
Predicting perceived transparency in textured displays
278
Anderson
What is the relationship between binocular disparity, contrast, and perceived depth?
279
Beall & Herbert
A Stroop analog task: Words versus facial expressions
280
Pourtois, Rouw, & de Gelder
The time course of face recognition : evidence for a dual route model
281
Buelthoff & Newell
Gender, average heads and categorical perception
282
Nagayama, Miyatani, & Toshima
The effects of temporal and spatial factor on face and non-face object recognition process: A study using the element presentation paradigm and working memory paradigm
283
Simion, Scheier, Shimojo, & Shimojo
Do we like what we see more or do we see more what we like?
284
Osada & Nagasaka
The effects of limited eye movements on judgments of emotion of band pass filtered faces
285
Hill & Johnston
Judging sex and identity from isolated facial movement
286
Sato & Shigemasu
Contribution of familiarity to reversed disparity illusion with human faces
287
Ando
Luminance-induced shift in the apparent direction of gaze
288
Pusch & Loomis
Judging another person's facing direction using peripheral vision
289
Martelli, Majaj, Palomares, Leigh, Ekman, & Pelli
Which features depend on which faces?
290
Buschmann & Troje
An illumination induced visual illusion that affects the perceived width of a human head
291
Paul, Schyns, & Gosselin
Category knowledge can form prior constraints on scene recognition from luminance and chromatic cues
292
James, Humphrey, Vilis, Corrie, & Goodale
Active and passive object recognition in a virtual environment
293
Fulton & Moore
The selection of environmental frames of reference
294
Peters, Gabbiani, & Koch
Models of object categorization reflect multiple categorization strategies
295
Sadr & Sinha
Random image structure evolution (RISE)
296
Dawson
Affective priming with masked, complex scenes
297
Cutzu
Computation of object features from object geometry and perceptual data
298
Thoresz & Sinha
Qualitative representations for recognition
299
Torralba, Sinha, & Oliva
Modeling contextual influences on object recognition
300
Phillips & Voshell
Contributions of geometric and image information in the perception of solid objects
301
Jacobs, Lu, & Liu
Image abstraction in shape representation and recognition
302
Walker & Malik
Defining perceptual metrics in shape space
303
Macuga, Gray, & Regan
Judging the direction of object motion-in-depth during simulated self-motion
304
Brooks & Owens
Effects of luminance, blur, and tunnel vision on postural stability
305
Wilkie & Wann
The contribution of flow, extra-retinal signals & visual frame to the control of steering
306
Saidpour & Andersen
Effects of speed and object motion in collision detection
307
Pelah & Thurrell
Reduction of perceived visual speed during locomotion: Evidence for quadrupedal perceptual pathways in human?
308
Royden
Computing heading in the presence of moving objects
309
Malo, Gutierrez, & Epifanio
What motion information is perceptually relevant?
310
Gilmore, Stine, Smith, Venkatesh, Kehn, & Klass
Infants' discrimination of heading direction from optic flow
311
Peh, Panerai, Droulez, Cornilleau-Pérès, & Cheong
Absolute distance perception during sagittal head motion
312
DeLucia, Kaiser, Garcia, & Sweet
Effects of relative size and height in field on absolute judgments of time to contact
313
Ando
Visual learning in the spatial prediction of an approaching 3D object
314
Panerai, Droulez, & Cornilleau-Pérès
Perception of object distances during self-motion: gauging the role of optical and oculomotor cues
315
Zhong, Cornilleau-Peres, Cheong, Yeow, & Droulez
Tilt perception from optic flow in two-view stimuli
316
Dyre, Morrow, & Richman
Heading performance is retinally invariant when peripheral optical flow is displayed off the axis of judgment
317
Zikovitz, Jenkin, & Harris
Comparison of stereoscopic and non-stereoscopic optic flow displays
318
Berndt, Wascher, Franz, Goetz, & Büelthoff
The effect of mirrored visual feedback on the EEG correlates of pointing direction
319
Danckert, Sharif, & Goodale
Intercepting moving targets in the upper and lower visual fields
320
Schlicht, Schrater, Kersten, & Legge
How well you reach depends on where you look
321
Riecke, von der Heyde, & Bülthoff
How real is virtual reality really? Comparing spatial updating using pointing tasks in real and virtual environments
322
Bingham
Distortions of distance and shape do not reflect a single continuous transformation on reach space
323
Caudek & Domini
Spatial and temporal surface interpolation in structure from motion
324
Cornilleau-Peres, Tai, & Cheong
Apparent distortion of the frontoparallel plane from wide-field motion parallax
325
Yang & Purves
Perception of objects that are both rotating and translating
326
Braunstein, Bocheva, Zhong, & Sauer
Judging depth, slant, and curvature in structure-from-motion
327
Vuong, Domini, & Caudek
Temporal integration in structure from motion
328
Chen, Domini, & Caudek
Perception of tilt: The role of the optic flow gradients
329
Domini, Skirko, & Caudek
Temporal integration of stereo and motion information
330
Feria, Braunstein, Sauer, & Andersen
Velocity difference and velocity ratio in structure-from-motion
331
Mangini & Biederman
Differentiating expression, gender, and identity in faces: Comparing normals, the ideal observer, and a prosopagnosic
332
O'Toole, Leopold, Vetter, & Blanz
Prototype-referenced shape perception : Adaptation and after-effects in a multidimensional face space
333
Gosselin & Schyns
Bubbles: A new technique to reveal the use of information in recognition tasks
334
Tanaka & Porterfield
The search for self-identity: The own-face effect
335
Martini, McKone, & Nakayama
Orientation tuning of human face processing estimated by contrast matching in transparency displays
336
Liu, Lalonde, & Chaudhuri
Are faces easier to recognize in 3/4 view than in full-face or profile view?
337
Tarr, Kersten, Cheng, & Rossion
It's Pat! Sexing faces using only red and green
338
Knappmeyer, Thornton, & Buelthoff
Facial motion can determine facial identity
339
Schyns, Bonnar, & Gosselin
The spatial scale information that mediates face identification, gender and expression
340
Liu, Harris, & Kanwisher
What makes a face a face: an MEG and fMRI study
341
Downing & Kanwisher
A cortical area specialized for visual processing of the human body
342
Zenger-Landolt & Koch
Attention reduces flanker suppression
343
He, Costello, Carlson, Zhuang, Chen, & Hu
What exactly does attention modulate in visual cortex?
344
Saenz, Buracas, & Boynton
Feature-based attentional effects in early human visual cortex
345
Supèr, Spekreijse, & Lamme
Contextual modulation in primary visual cortex as a neuronal substrate for working memory
346
Scholte, Spekreijse, & Lamme
Neural correlates of global scene segmentation are present during inattentional blindness
347
Alvarez, Wolfe, Horowitz, & Arsenio
Limits on multielement tracking
348
Jovicich, Peters, Koch, Braun, Chang, & Ernst
Brain areas specific for attentional load in a motion tracking task
349
Wolfe
Guided Search 4.0: A guided search model that does not require memory for rejected distractors
350
Hochstein & Ahissar
The ups and downs of conscious visual perception
351
Pollick, Lestou, Ryu, & Cho
Estimating efficiency in the categorization of biological motion
352
Fujimoto, Yagi, & Sato
Incompatible body-translation delays visual perception of human gait
353
Paterson & Pollick
Form and animacy in the perception of affect from biological motion
354
Thornton, Cunningham, Troje, & Bülthoff
"You can tell by the way I use my walk...": New studies of gender and gait
355
Troje
Decomposing biological motion: A linear model for analysis and synthesis of human gait patterns
356
Giese
Hierarchical neural model for the recognition of biological motion
357
Jokisch, Midford, & Troje
Biological motion as a cue for the perception of absolute size