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THE EFFECT OF STIMULUS AREA ON THE REACTION TIME TO THE ONSET AND CESSATION OF VISUAL STIMULATION IN THE PERIPHERYVersteeg, Arlen Dale, 1941- January 1971 (has links)
No description available.
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The detection of digitisation in visual imagesPelah, Adar January 1994 (has links)
No description available.
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Mechanisms of visual pigment variation in teleostsWood, Paula January 1994 (has links)
No description available.
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Active perception in machine visionLuckman, Adrian John January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
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Recognizing parameterized objects from range dataReid, Ian D. January 1991 (has links)
No description available.
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The role of spatial and temporal structure in stereopsisSumnall, Jane Helen January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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The use of blur zones and aerial perspective in perceiving depth in low level flight simulationPatterson, Michael Joseph 12 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Computational mechanisms for colour and lightness constancyCaplinger, Wayne Holmes January 1984 (has links)
Attributes of colour images have been found which allow colour and lightness constancy to be computed without prior knowledge of the illumination, even in complex scenes with three -dimensional objects and multiple light sources of different colours. The ratio of surface reflectance colour can be immediately determined between any two image points, however distant. It is possible to determine the number of spectrally independent light sources, and to isolate the effect of each. Reflectance edges across which the illumination remains constant can be correctly identified. In a scene illuminated by multiple distant point sources of distinguishalbe colours, the spatial angle between the sources and their brightness ratios can be computed from the image alone. If there are three or more sources then reflectance constancy is immediately possible without use of additional knowledge. The results are an extension of Edwin Land's Retinex algorithm. They account for previously unexplained data such as Gilchrist's veiling luminances and his single- colour rooms. The validity of the algorithms has been demonstrated by implementing them in a series of computer programs. The computational methods do not follow the edge or region finding paradigms of previous vision mechanisms. Although the new reflectance constancy cues occur in all normal scenes, it is likely that human vision makes use of only some of them. In a colour image all the pixels of a single surface colour lie in a single structure in flux space. The dimension of the structure equals the number of illumination colours. The reflectance ratio between two regions is determined by the transformation between their structures. Parallel tracing of edge pairs in their respective structures identifies an edge of constant illumination, and gives the lightness ratio of each such edge. Enhanced noise reduction techniques for colour pictures follow from the natural constraints on the flux structures.
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Complex optical filtering and spatial frequency distributionsClarke, William Henry January 1969 (has links)
No description available.
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Neural adaptation in humans and cats subjected to long term optical reversal of vision : an experimental and analytical study of plasticityDavies, Peter Robert Talbot. January 1978 (has links)
The human vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR) is known to undergo major plastic modification in coping with sensory conflict brought about by optical reversing prisms. The first phase of this study proposes a simple model to account for this modifiability in terms of known neurophysiology. To study the phenomenon further two series of experiments were conducted on long-term vision-reversed cats. For this a new computer technique was developed to analyse oculomotor responses. The first series studied the time course and amplitude dependence of adaptation; the second, the frequency response of the fully adapted system. The adaptive process exhibited strict limitations, the functional effectiveness of which is quantitatively defined. The findings as a whole suggest that adaptive mechanisms other than the VOR are at play and that far more complex interactions exist between vestibulo- and visual-motor mechanisms than originally envisaged.
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