Volume 6, Pages 1-1487 doi:10.1167/6 http://journalofvision.org/6/ ISSN 1534-7362
Volume 6, 2006
1 The human eye is an example of robust optical design
2 Accumulation and persistence of memory for natural scenes
3 Lightness identification of patterned three-dimensional, real objects
4 Tilt aftereffect for texture edges is larger than in matched subjective edges, but both are strong adaptors of luminance edges
5 Limits to human movement planning in tasks with asymmetric gain landscapes
6 The extended horopter: Quantifying retinal correspondence across changes of 3D eye position
7 Shape recognition alters sensitivity in stereoscopic depth discrimination
8 An advantage for detecting dynamic targets in natural scenes
1 Contribution of chromatic aberrations to color signals in the primate visual system
2 Cues to an Equivalent Lighting Model
3 Motion aftereffects specific to surface depth order: Beyond binocular disparity
4 Floating square illusion: Perceptual uncoupling of static and dynamic objects in motion
5 More evidence for sensorimotor adaptation in color perception
6 The time course of visual competition to the presentation of centrally fixated faces
7 Crowding, feature integration, and two kinds of “attention”
8 Collinear facilitation is largely uncertainty reduction
1 A feature-tracking model simulates the motion direction bias induced by phase congruency
2 Dynamics of attentional deployment during saccadic programming
3 Advantages and disadvantages of human dichromacy
4 The effect of spatial configuration on surround suppression of contrast sensitivity
5 Higher level chromatic mechanisms for image segmentation
6 Perceptual synchrony of audiovisual streams for natural and artificial motion sequences
7 Feature-based attentional integration of color and visual motion
8 Are cone sensitivities determined by natural color statistics?
9 Corrections in: Visual field representations and locations of visual areas V1/2/3 in human visual cortex
i Parallel publication of special issues
ii Finding visual features: Using stochastic stimuli to discover internal representations
1 Unraveling adaptation and mutual inhibition in perceptual rivalry
2 The receptive field and internal noise for position acuity change with feature separation
3 Same calculation efficiency but different internal noise for luminance- and contrast-modulated stimuli detection
4 Classification images for detection, contrast discrimination, and identification tasks with a common ideal observer
5 The spatiotemporal properties of visual completion measured by response classification
6 Additive effects in a rod-and-frame illusion estimated by response classification
7 Visual search in noise: Revealing the influence of structural cues by gaze-contingent classification image analysis
8 Classification images with uncertainty
9 Dimensionality reduction in neural models: An information-theoretic generalization of spike-triggered average and covariance analysis
10 Strategies optimize the detection of motion transients
11 Estimating nonlinear receptive fields from natural images
12 Computing dynamic classification images from correlation maps
13 Spike-triggered neural characterization
14 Bayesian models of binocular 3-D motion perception
15 Visual search near threshold: Some features are more equal than others
1 Identification of 3D shape from texture and motion across the visual field
2 Vision and touch are automatically integrated for the perception of sequences of events
3 High-speed navigators: Using more than what meets the eye
4 Contrast–response functions for multifocal visual evoked potentials: A test of a model relating V1 activity to multifocal visual evoked potentials activity
5 The role of spatial phase in texture segmentation and contour integration
6 Stability of gold bead tissue markers
7 Illusory spreading of watercolor
8 How direction of illumination affects visually perceived surface roughness
9 Motion from occlusion
10 Accommodative microfluctuations and iris contour
11 Hastening orientation sensitivity
Vision Sciences Society
1 Motion aftereffect elicits smooth pursuit eye movements
2 The swinging doors of perception: Stereomotion without binocular matching
3 Discrimination of amplitude spectrum slope in the fovea and parafovea and the local amplitude distributions of natural scene imagery
4 The influence of biological motion perception on structure-from-motion interpretations at different speeds
5 The influence of the Brentano illusion on eye and hand movements
6 Adaptation to sine-wave gratings selectively reduces the contrast gain of the adapted stimuli
1 Combining achromatic and chromatic cues to transparency
2 The interaction of eye movements and retinal signals during the perception of 3-D motion direction
3 Learning to discriminate complex movements: Biological versus artificial trajectories
4 Perceived orientation of complex shape reflects graded part decomposition
5 Changes in expectation consequent on experience, modeled by a simple, forgetful neural circuit
6 Visual perception of biological motion by form: A template-matching analysis
7 Adaptation aftereffects in the perception of gender from biological motion
1 Visual search: The role of peripheral information measured using gaze-contingent displays
2 Humans can perceive heading without visual path information
3 Perception of surface slant from oriented textures
4 The role of memory in guiding attention during natural vision
5 The mechanisms of collinear integration
6 Vernier acuity of illusory contours defined by motion
7 The accuracy and reliability of perceived depth from linear perspective as a function of image size
8 Transient covert attention and the perceived rate of flicker
9 Two cases requiring external reinforcement in perceptual learning
10 Perceptual asynchrony between color and motion with a single direction change
11 Role of focal attention on latencies and trajectories of visually guided manual pointing
12 Nonlinearities in color coding: Compensating color appearance for the eye's spectral sensitivity
1 Animals roll around the clock: The rotation invariance of ultrarapid visual processing
2 Reversed phi revisited
3 Forty-four years of studying light adaptation using the probed-sinewave paradigm
4 Kin recognition and the perceived facial similarity of children
5 Crystalline lens radii of curvature from Purkinje and Scheimpflug imaging
6 Depth of interocular suppression associated with continuous flash suppression, flash suppression, and binocular rivalry
7 The flight path of the phoenix—The visible trace of invisible elements in human vision
8 Induced movement: The flying bluebottle illusion
9 Induced visual fading of complex images
10 Color constancy and hue scaling
11 Spatial summation of face information
12 Edge integration and the perception of brightness and darkness
1 The relation of phase noise and luminance contrast to overt attention in complex visual stimuli
2 A cortical pooling model of spatial summation for perimetric stimuli
3 Retinal image shifts, but not eye movements per se, cause alternations in awareness during binocular rivalry
4 Top–down attention selection is fine grained
5 Human cone light adaptation: From behavioral measurements to molecular mechanisms
6 Stereomotion suppression and the perception of speed: Accuracy and precision as a function of 3D trajectory
7 Binocular contrast vision at and above threshold
8 The time course of binocular rivalry reveals a fundamental role of noise
9 Spatial scale of stereomotion speed processing
10 Bayesian model of human color constancy
11 The fate of object features during perisaccadic mislocalization
12 Neural correlates of the visual vertical meridian asymmetry
13 Spatial four-alternative forced-choice method is the preferred psychophysical method for naïve observers