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The effect of eye movement on occurrence of the MacKay illusion.Albert, Richard E. (Richard Elwood) January 1972 (has links)
No description available.
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Perceiving the shape of the world : the usefulness of motion perspective information under brief exposure durationsGreen, Caroline Anne January 1988 (has links)
The aim of the experiments reported here was to examine the effectiveness of motion perspective to provide sufficient proximal information for subjects to discriminate between various types of stimulus presentations presented at brief exposure durations. Throughout, the duration of presentation was limited to under one second - the duration of simulated movement ranging from one space-time transformation to fifteen space-time transformations. With the exception of Experiment 1, the technique of stimulus generation made use of random-dot patterns. The stimulus patterns were complex, in general consisting of 11,112 spots randomly distributed in an array of 796 (horizontal) by 770 (vertical) possible spot locations. In addition to 'signal' dots which were transformed to new positions according to the rules of perspective, individual frames in the film displays also contained a large amount of visual 'noise' in the form of dots which appeared randomly in the array.
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Differences in the availability of global and local information in a visual imageNicol, D. J. January 1983 (has links)
No description available.
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Pattern in composition of the visual artsWages, Mark A. January 1998 (has links)
This creative project dealt with the development of pattern as it relates to composition. A variety of methods of developing pattern were utilized: stenciling, transfer, and Macromedia Freehand. This assortment of applications provided for a broad exploration of pattern making. The artist also conducted in-depth research of artists who incorporated pattern into their work.As a result of the project, the artist increased his comprehension of the capabilities of pattern in picture making. An additional insight about the disappearance of the pattern format was also attained through research of the pattern movement. The writer identified an under-utilized method of depiction that is likely to be resurrected and developed. This research is artistically relevant in that it recognizes a compositional method that was prematurely abandoned and is worthy of re-exploration. / Department of Art
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Illusions of visual orientation : comparisons between perceptual and visuo-motor tasksDyde, Richard Thomas January 2001 (has links)
The Milner and Goodale (1995) model of dual cortical visual systems suggests that, in the primate cortex, separate neural substrates dominate the tasks of visual perception and visuo-motor control. This model derives from a number of independent sources of evidence: anatomical, physiological and behavioural. Neuropsychological evidence in humans suggests that visual perception and visuo-motor control can be selectively impaired through damage to the ventral and dorsal visual streams respectively. Evidence has emerged that in the healthy human visual cortex, differentiable effects of visual illusions can be found between the two measures of perception and visuo- motor control. This evidence has been cited to support the Milner and Goodale (1995) model. The series of studies reported in this dissertation used a similar, but methodologically revised application of the illusion paradigm in the novel domain of orientation. Using two types of visual illusions, the simultaneous tilt illusion (STI) and the rod-and-frame illusion (RFI), a series of studies found patterns of association, dissociation and interaction that strongly support the Mihier and Goodale model. The critical issue, in terms of predicting the pattern of effects across perception and visuo-motor control tasks, was found to be the siting of the causal mechanisms underlying the illusion employed.
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The effect of selective spatial attention on peripheral discrimination thresholdsMuller, Hermann Josef January 1986 (has links)
Experiments were conducted to investigate the role of attention in peripheral detection and discrimination. Advance spatial cues informed subjects about likely target positions; the task required to detect/discriminate plus localise a target briefly presented at cued or uncued locations, with accuracy as the dependent variable ("cost-benefit" analysis).Spatial cueing produced reliable advantages for cued over uncued locations, in single and in multiple element displays. However, costs plus benefits were less marked for single displays. Thus, advance knowledge of the likely target location enhances performance also when there are no competing stimuli present in the visual field. But costs plus benefits are smaller because single target onsets at uncued locations summon attention in the same "automatic" fashion as peripheral cues. Peripheral cues trigger a rapid facilitatory component (automatic), fading out within 300 msec after cue onset. Facilitation is then maintained by a less effective mechanism (controlled). Central cues initiate only this second component. Sustained, controlled, orienting in response to central cues is interruptable by automatic orienting in response to uninformative peripheral flashes. Interruption also occurs when irrelevant flashes compete with peripheral cues. However, interference is less marked for the early automatic than for the following controlled orienting component. Indication of a second position (four-location display) to be most likely resulted in a marked sensitivity gain for this position, relative to uncued locations in a single cue condition. That is, attention could be simultaneously shared between two cued positions. For a luminance detection task (single target), cued locations showed no advantage in sensitivity; but for letter detection tasks (target plus distractors), there was a marked priming effect. That is, letter detection is capacity limited, whereas luminance detection is not. In all tasks, decision criteria are largely preset according to a-priori target probabilities assigned to particular locations, i.e. more liberal for cued and more conservative for uncued locations.
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Configural and featural processing in face recognitionCollishaw, Stephan M. January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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The McCollough Effect as an indicator of central neurotransmitter activity in humansMcMahon, Denis M. January 1992 (has links)
No description available.
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Early auditory deprivation and visual behavior.MacDougall, James Colin. January 1969 (has links)
No description available.
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Visual filtering in persons with Down syndromeHitzig, Sander L. January 2001 (has links)
A forced-choice reaction time (RT) task was used to examine the efficiency of visual filtering (the inhibition of processing of irrelevant stimuli) and the concomitant ability to narrow the focus of the attentional lens in persons with Down syndrome (n = 10) and children of average intelligence (n = 13) matched for mental age (MA) (average MA = approximately 5.7 years). Conditions varied with regard to the presence or absence of distractors and their proximity to a target stimulus, and the presence or absence of a visual window within which the target stimulus was presented. Although the study yielded no significant results due to a lack of power, the mean correct reaction times (RTs) indicate that both the adults with Down syndrome and the typically developing children were less efficient at filtering close distractors as compared to far distractors or no distractors. As well, the results suggest that the presence of the visual window failed to facilitate performance in both groups. Further investigation is warranted to determine the status of visual filtering in persons with Down syndrome relative to their level of functioning at an MA level of approximately 5 years, a period that is critical in the development of attentional processes.
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