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Disparity tuning of the stereoscopic (cyclopean) motion aftereffect

Across five experiments this study investigated the disparity tuning of the stereoscopic motion aftereffect (adaptation from moving retinal disparity). Adapting and test stimuli were moving and stationary stereoscopic grating patterns, respectively, created from dynamic random-dot stereograms. Obser...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Vision research (Oxford) 1996-04, Vol.36 (7), p.975-983
Main Authors: Patterson, Robert, Bowd, Christopher, Phinney, Ray, Fox, Robert, Lehmkuhle, Stephen
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Across five experiments this study investigated the disparity tuning of the stereoscopic motion aftereffect (adaptation from moving retinal disparity). Adapting and test stimuli were moving and stationary stereoscopic grating patterns, respectively, created from dynamic random-dot stereograms. Observers adapted to moving stereoscopic grating patterns presented with a given disparity and viewed stationary test patterns presented with the same or differing disparity to examine whether the motion aftereffect is disparity contingent. Across experiments aftereffect duration was greatest when adapting motion and test pattern both were presented with zero disparity and in the plane of fixation. Aftereffect declined as disparity of adapting motion and/or test pattern increased away from fixation, even under conditions in which depth position of adapt and test was equal. This argues against a relative depth separation explanation of the decline, and instead suggests that the amount of adaptable substrate decreases away from fixation.
ISSN:0042-6989
1878-5646
DOI:10.1016/0042-6989(95)00169-7