Context superiority in a detection task with line-element stimuli: a low-level effect 5 – 16
Andrei Gorea, Bela Julesz
Perceived causality occurs with stroboscopic movement of one or both stimulus elements 17 – 20
Ian E Gordon, Ross H Day, Erica J Stecher
The importance of velocity gradients in the perception of three-dimensional rigidity 21 – 27
Bart De Bruyn, Guy A Orban
The binocular representation of uniform motion 29 – 34
Michael T Swanston, Nicholas J Wade, Hiroshi Ono
Emmert's law in the Ames room 35 – 41
Jonathan Dwyer, Roderick Ashton, Jack Broerse
Measurement of visual aftereffects and inferences about binocular mechanisms in human vision 43 – 55
Laurie M Wilcox, Brian Timney, Robert St John
Wheels: a new illusion in the perception of rolling objects 57 – 61
Giovanni B Vicaria, Paola Bressan
Expertise, visual search, and information pick-up in squash 63 – 77
Bruce Abernethy
The standard deviation of luminance as a metric for contrast in random-dot images 79 – 101
Bernard Moulden, Fred Kingdom, Linda F Gatley
Saccadic suppression of displacement is strongest in central vision 103 – 111
Bruce Bridgeman, Brian Fisher
Flicker adaptation in the periphery at constant perceived modulation depth 113 – 117
Stephen T Hammett, Andrew T Smith
Illusory contours from pictorially three-dimensional inducing elements 119 – 121
Theodore E Parks, Irvin Rock
An illusion of goose orientation 123 – 132
Robert B Post, Nancy Moore
Odor intensity of mixed and unmixed stimuli under environmentally realistic conditions 123 – 132
Franc T Sohiet, William S Cain