首页|Adaptation to geometrically skewed moving images: An asymmetrical effect on the double-drift illusion

Adaptation to geometrically skewed moving images: An asymmetrical effect on the double-drift illusion

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Progressive addition lenses introduce distortions in the peripheral visual field that alter both form and motion perception. Here we seek to understand how our peripheral visual field adapts to complex distortions. The adaptation was induced across the visual field by geometrically skewed image sequences, and aftereffects were measured via changes in perception of the double-drift illusion. The double-drift or curveball stimulus contains both local and object motion. Therefore, the aftereffects induced by geometrical distortions might be indicative of how this adaptation interacts with the local and object motion signals.

Skew distortionsCurveballIllusionAdaptationProgressive lensesOptic flow

Rifai, Katharina、Wahl, Siegfried、Watson, Tamara、Garcia, Miguel Garcia

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Carl Zeiss Vis Int GmbH, Turnstr 27, D-73430 Aalen, Germany

Western Sydney Univ, Sch Psychol, Sydney, NSW 2214, Australia

2021

Vision Research

Vision Research

SCI
ISSN:0042-6989
年,卷(期):2021.179
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