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The perception of motion transparency: A signal-to-noise limit

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Edwards, Mark
Greenwood, John

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Pergamon-Elsevier Ltd

Abstract

A number of studies were conducted to determine how many transparent motion signals observers could simultaneously perceive. It was found that that the limit was two. However, observers required a signal intensity of about 42% in order to perceive a bi-directional transparent stimulus. This signal level was about three times that required to detect a uni-directional motion signal, and higher than was physically possible to achieve in a tri-directional stimulus (in a stimulus in which the different transparent signals are defined only by direction). These results indicate that signal intensity plays an important role in establishing the transparency limit and, as a consequence, implicates the global-motion area (V5/MT) in this process.

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Vision Research

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2037-12-31
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