"Non-retinotopic processing" in Ternus motion displays modeled by spatiotemporal filters
"Non-retinotopic processing" in Ternus motion displays modeled by spatiotemporal filters
Recently, M. Boi, H. Ogmen, J. Krummenacher, T. U. Otto, & M. H. Herzog (2009) reported a fascinating visual effect, where the direction of apparent motion was disambiguated by cues along the path of apparent motion, the Ternus–Pikler group motion, even though no actual movement occurs in this stimulus. They referred to their study as a “litmus test” to distinguish “non-retinotopic” (motion-based) from “retinotopic” (retina-based) image processing. We adapted the test to one with simple grating stimuli that could be more readily modeled and replicated their psychophysical results quantitatively with this stimulus. We then modeled our experiments in 3D (x, y, t) Fourier space and demonstrated that the observed perceptual effects are readily accounted for by integration of information within a detector that is oriented in space and time, in a similar way to previous explanations of other motion illusions. This demonstration brings the study of Boi et al. into the more general context of perception of moving objects.
Pooresmaeili, A.
319b6aed-8454-4ad2-b16e-8fadfdfd2e53
Cicchini, G. M.
cff00307-069c-4e17-bd25-1a045a3475c4
Morrone, M. C.
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Burr, D.
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January 2012
Pooresmaeili, A.
319b6aed-8454-4ad2-b16e-8fadfdfd2e53
Cicchini, G. M.
cff00307-069c-4e17-bd25-1a045a3475c4
Morrone, M. C.
f7314d8c-af39-40f2-8f10-9aa80d5a46f7
Burr, D.
bddb8dff-8315-4723-8a0c-b8c7f48e5251
Pooresmaeili, A., Cicchini, G. M., Morrone, M. C. and Burr, D.
(2012)
"Non-retinotopic processing" in Ternus motion displays modeled by spatiotemporal filters.
Journal of Vision, 12 (1).
(doi:10.1167/12.1.10).
Abstract
Recently, M. Boi, H. Ogmen, J. Krummenacher, T. U. Otto, & M. H. Herzog (2009) reported a fascinating visual effect, where the direction of apparent motion was disambiguated by cues along the path of apparent motion, the Ternus–Pikler group motion, even though no actual movement occurs in this stimulus. They referred to their study as a “litmus test” to distinguish “non-retinotopic” (motion-based) from “retinotopic” (retina-based) image processing. We adapted the test to one with simple grating stimuli that could be more readily modeled and replicated their psychophysical results quantitatively with this stimulus. We then modeled our experiments in 3D (x, y, t) Fourier space and demonstrated that the observed perceptual effects are readily accounted for by integration of information within a detector that is oriented in space and time, in a similar way to previous explanations of other motion illusions. This demonstration brings the study of Boi et al. into the more general context of perception of moving objects.
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Published date: January 2012
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Local EPrints ID: 481497
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/481497
ISSN: 1534-7362
PURE UUID: 973baae0-6d21-4cbb-a5ab-5d7b9c7d4892
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Date deposited: 30 Aug 2023 16:35
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:18
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Author:
A. Pooresmaeili
Author:
G. M. Cicchini
Author:
M. C. Morrone
Author:
D. Burr
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