Nulling the motion aftereffect with dynamic random-dot stimuli: limitations and implications.
No === We used biased random-dot dynamic test stimuli to measure the strength of the motion aftereffect (MAE) to evaluate the usefulness of this technique as a measure of motion adaptation strength. The stimuli consisted of noise dots whose individual directions were random and of signal dots moving...
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ndltd-BRADFORD-oai-bradscholars.brad.ac.uk-10454-32842019-08-31T03:02:09Z Nulling the motion aftereffect with dynamic random-dot stimuli: limitations and implications. Keeble, David R.T. Castet, E. Verstraten, F. Motion adaptation Integration Segregation, Aliasing Eccentricity Density No We used biased random-dot dynamic test stimuli to measure the strength of the motion aftereffect (MAE) to evaluate the usefulness of this technique as a measure of motion adaptation strength. The stimuli consisted of noise dots whose individual directions were random and of signal dots moving in a unique direction. All dots moved at the same speed. For each condition, the nulling percentage (percentage of signal dots needed to perceptually null the MAE) was scaled with respect to the coherence threshold (percentage needed to perceive the coherent motion of signal dots without prior adaptation). The increase of these scaled values with the density of dots in the test stimulus suggests that MAE strength is underestimated when measured with low densities. We show that previous reports of high nulling percentages at slow speeds do not reflect strong MAEs, but are actually due to spatio-temporal aliasing, which dramatically increases coherence thresholds. We further show that MAE strength at slow speed increases with eccentricity. These findings are consistent with the idea that using this dynamic test stimulus preferentially reveals the adaptation of a population of high-speed motion units whose activity is independent of adapted low-speed motion units. 2009-08-12T10:39:09Z 2009-08-12T10:39:09Z 2002 Article No full-text available in the repository Keeble, D.R.T., Castet, E. and Verstraten, F. (2002). Nulling the motion aftereffect with dynamic random-dot stimuli: limitations and implications. Journal of Vision. Vol. 2, No. 4, pp. 302-311. http://hdl.handle.net/10454/3284 en http://dx.doi.org/10.1167/2.4.3 |
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Motion adaptation Integration Segregation, Aliasing Eccentricity Density |
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Motion adaptation Integration Segregation, Aliasing Eccentricity Density Keeble, David R.T. Castet, E. Verstraten, F. Nulling the motion aftereffect with dynamic random-dot stimuli: limitations and implications. |
description |
No === We used biased random-dot dynamic test stimuli to measure the strength of the motion aftereffect (MAE) to evaluate the usefulness of this technique as a measure of motion adaptation strength. The stimuli consisted of noise dots whose individual directions were random and of signal dots moving in a unique direction. All dots moved at the same speed. For each condition, the nulling percentage (percentage of signal dots needed to perceptually null the MAE) was scaled with respect to the coherence threshold (percentage needed to perceive the coherent motion of signal dots without prior adaptation). The increase of these scaled values with the density of dots in the test stimulus suggests that MAE strength is underestimated when measured with low densities. We show that previous reports of high nulling percentages at slow speeds do not reflect strong MAEs, but are actually due to spatio-temporal aliasing, which dramatically increases coherence thresholds. We further show that MAE strength at slow speed increases with eccentricity. These findings are consistent with the idea that using this dynamic test stimulus preferentially reveals the adaptation of a population of high-speed motion units whose activity is independent of adapted low-speed motion units. |
author |
Keeble, David R.T. Castet, E. Verstraten, F. |
author_facet |
Keeble, David R.T. Castet, E. Verstraten, F. |
author_sort |
Keeble, David R.T. |
title |
Nulling the motion aftereffect with dynamic random-dot stimuli: limitations and implications. |
title_short |
Nulling the motion aftereffect with dynamic random-dot stimuli: limitations and implications. |
title_full |
Nulling the motion aftereffect with dynamic random-dot stimuli: limitations and implications. |
title_fullStr |
Nulling the motion aftereffect with dynamic random-dot stimuli: limitations and implications. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Nulling the motion aftereffect with dynamic random-dot stimuli: limitations and implications. |
title_sort |
nulling the motion aftereffect with dynamic random-dot stimuli: limitations and implications. |
publishDate |
2009 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10454/3284 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT keebledavidrt nullingthemotionaftereffectwithdynamicrandomdotstimulilimitationsandimplications AT castete nullingthemotionaftereffectwithdynamicrandomdotstimulilimitationsandimplications AT verstratenf nullingthemotionaftereffectwithdynamicrandomdotstimulilimitationsandimplications |
_version_ |
1719239497048129536 |