Volume 7, Pages 1-36 doi:10.1167/7 http://journalofvision.org/7/ ISSN 1534-7362
Volume 7, 2007
i The numbering of things
1 The effect of viewpoint on perceived visual roughness
2 Tuning for temporal interval in human apparent motion detection
3 Some observations on the pedestal effect
4 Parameter learning but not structure learning: A Bayesian network model of constraints on early perceptual learning
5 Sequence learning in two-dimensional smooth pursuit eye movements in humans
6 Electrophysiological correlates of perceptual reversals for three different types of multistable images
7 What is the strength of a mask in visual metacontrast masking?
8 Modulation depth threshold in the Compensation Comparison approach
9 Temporal aspects of orientation pooling using visual noise stimuli
10 What do we perceive in a glance of a real-world scene?
i Crowding: Including illusory conjunctions, surround suppression, and attention
1 Grouping of contextual elements that affect vernier thresholds
2 Effect of letter spacing on visual span and reading speed
3 Spacing affects some but not all visual searches: Implications for theories of attention and crowding
4 Configuration influence on crowding
5 The nature of letter crowding as revealed by first- and second-order classification images
6 The roles of cortical image separation and size in active visual search performance
7 Spatial attention, preview, and popout: Which factors influence critical spacing in crowded displays?
8 Crowding is directed to the fovea and preserves only feature contrast
9 The case for the visual span as a sensory bottleneck in reading
10 Crowding between first- and second-order letter stimuli in normal foveal and peripheral vision
11 Temporal properties of the polarity advantage effect in crowding
12 Crowding and surround suppression: Not to be confused
13 Horizontal and vertical asymmetry in visual spatial crowding effects
14 On the generality of crowding: Visual crowding in size, saturation, and hue compared to orientation
15 Position shifts following crowded second-order motion adaptation reveal processing of local and global motion without awareness
16 Crowding: A neuroanalytic approach
17 Measuring visual clutter
18 How odgcrnwi becomes crowding: Stimulus-specific learning reduces crowding
19 Stimulus similarity modulates competitive interactions in human visual cortex
20 Crowding and eccentricity determine reading rate
21 Amblyopic reading is crowded
22 An escape from crowding
23 Crowding with conjunctions of simple features
24 Holistic crowding: Selective interference between configural representations of faces in crowded scenes
25 Foveal contour interactions and crowding effects at the resolution limit of the visual system
1 Contrast thresholds for component motion with full and poor attention
2 Living up to optimal expectations
3 A model of spatiotemporal signal processing by primate cones and horizontal cells
4 Human short-wavelength-sensitive cone light adaptation
5 Glass pattern responses in macaque V2 neurons
6 Where to look next? Eye movements reduce local uncertainty
7 Corrections to: Unfocussed spatial attention underlies the crowding effect in indirect form vision
1 Simulating human cones from mid-mesopic up to high-photopic luminances
2 Effects of spatial and temporal context on color categories and color constancy
3 Motion signals bias localization judgments: A unified explanation for the flash-lag, flash-drag, flash-jump, and Frohlich illusions
4 Added noise affects the neural correlates of upright and inverted faces differently
5 Monocular symmetry in binocular vision
6 Silhouetted face profiles: A new methodology for face perception research
7 Contextual modulation involves suppression and facilitation from the center and the surround
8 Residual cone vision without 
α-transducin
9 Orientation discrimination in 5-year-olds and adults tested with luminance-modulated and contrast-modulated gratings
10 Fear perception: Can objective and subjective awareness measures be dissociated?
i Sensorimotor Processing and Goal-Directed Movement
1 Learning to imitate novel motion sequences
2 Automatic adjustment of visuomotor readiness
3 Illusory contrast-induced shifts in binocular visual direction bias saccadic eye movements toward the perceived target position
4 Computations for geometrically accurate visually guided reaching in 3-D space
5 Dual-task interference is greater in delayed grasping than in visually guided grasping
6 The role of memory in visually guided reaching
7 Learning to integrate arbitrary signals from vision and touch
8 Influence of initial hand and target position on reach errors in optic ataxic and normal subjects
9 Neck muscle vibration in full cues affects pointing
10 Trading off speed and accuracy in rapid, goal-directed movements
11 A comparison of localization judgments and pointing precision
12 Proprioceptive deafferentation slows down the processing of visual hand feedback
13 Optimality of human movement under natural variations of visual–motor uncertainty
14 Flexibility in intercepting moving objects
15 Neuronal activity in superior colliculus signals both stimulus identity and saccade goals during visual conjunction search
16 Influence of saccadic adaptation on spatial localization: Comparison of verbal and pointing reports
1 Priming of pop-out depends upon the current goals of observers
2 On the effective number of tracked trajectories in normal human vision
3 Texture and object motion in slant discrimination: Failure of reliability-based weighting of cues may be evidence for strong fusion
4 Visual estimation under risk
5 Probabilistic modeling of eye movement data during conjunction search via feature-based attention
6 Attention and visual texture segregation
7 Both parallelism and orthogonality are used to perceive 3D slant of rectangles from 2D images
8 Aging and blur adaptation
9 Illusory bending of a rigidly moving line segment: Effects of image motion and smooth pursuit eye movements
10 The appearance of figures seen through a narrow aperture under free viewing conditions: Effects of spontaneous eye motions
11 Temporal order judgment and simple reaction times: Evidence for a common processing system
12 The influence of object-relative visuomotor set on express saccades
13 The potential importance of saturating and supersaturating contrast response functions in visual cortex
i Measuring demand for online articles at the 
Journal of Vision
1 Motion signal and the perceived positions of moving objects
2 The effects of transcranial magnetic stimulation on visual rivalry
3 Shape constancy and depth-order violations in structure from motion: A look at non-frontoparallel axes of rotation
4 Sensory and decisional factors in motion-induced blindness
5 Robust cue integration: A Bayesian model and evidence from cue-conflict studies with stereoscopic and figure cues to slant
6 Feature-specific interactions in salience from combined feature contrasts: Evidence for a bottom–up saliency map in V1
7 Staying focused: A functional account of perceptual suppression during binocular rivalry
8 Temporal aspects of cue combination
9 How do attention and adaptation affect contrast sensitivity?
10 The contribution of the posterior surface to the coma aberration of the human cornea
11 Age-Related changes in ocular aberrations with accommodation
1 Asymmetric transfer of the dynamic motion aftereffect between first- and second-order cues and among different second-order cues
2 Local figure–ground cues are valid for natural images
3 The time course of the inversion effect during individual face discrimination
4 The effect of sildenafil citrate (Viagra®) on visual sensitivity
5 Refractive changes associated with oblique viewing and reading in myopes and emmetropes
6 Cone selectivity derived from the responses of the retinal cone mosaic to natural scenes
7 A method for generating a “purely first-order” dichoptic motion stimulus
8 The economics of motion perception and invariants of visual sensitivity
9 The lawful perception of apparent motion
10 Percept-choice sequences driven by interrupted ambiguous stimuli: A low-level neural model
11 Spatiotemporal templates for detecting orientation-defined targets
12 An unusual kind of contrast adaptation: Shifting a contrast comparison level
13 Learning Bayesian priors for depth perception
14 Visual performance in emmetropia and low myopia after correction of high-order aberrations
15 Inducing features from visual noise
16 Backscroll illusion in far peripheral vision
Vision Sciences Society
1 Optimal observer model of single-fixation oddity search predicts a shallow set-size function
2 Larger stimuli are judged to last longer
3 Low-level visual saliency does not predict change detection in natural scenes
4 A virtual ophthalmotrope illustrating oculomotor coordinate systems and retinal projection geometry
5 Perceptual reversals need no prompting by attention
6 A bottom–up model of spatial attention predicts human error patterns in rapid scene recognition
7 On the limited role of target onset in the gap task: Support for the motor-preparation hypothesis
8 Mapping a field of suppression surrounding visual stimuli
9 Neural compensation for the best aberration correction
10 Shared attentional resources for global and local motion processing
11 Integrating audiovisual information for the control of overt attention
12 Peripheral vision: Good for biological motion, bad for signal noise segregation?
13 Contrast amplification in global texture orientation discrimination
14 Motion perceptual learning: When only task-relevant information is learned
15 The control of attention to faces
16 The shape of the human lens nucleus with accommodation
1 Modeling internal stress distributions in the human lens: Can opponent theories coexist?
2 Perception of object trajectory: Parsing retinal motion into self and object movement components
3 Veridical perception of moving colors by trajectory integration of input signals
4 The stability of steady state accommodation in human infants
5 Attention changes perceived size of moving visual patterns
6 Collinear facilitation in color vision
7 Spatial vision deficit underlies poor sine-wave motion direction discrimination in anisometropic amblyopia
8 The parallel between reverse-phi and motion aftereffects
9 Task-set switching with natural scenes: Measuring the cost of deploying top-down attention
10 Understanding and misunderstanding extraocular muscle pulleys
11 A common light-prior for visual search, shape, and reflectance judgments
12 Contrast gain control in natural scenes
13 Shape from shading: New perspectives from the Polo Mint stimulus
14 Bimodal sensory discrimination is finer than dual single modality discrimination
1 The perception of suprathreshold contrast and fast adaptive filtering
2 Anchoring versus spatial filtering accounts of simultaneous lightness contrast
3 Are changes in semantic and structural information sufficient for oculomotor capture?
4 Detection of biological and nonbiological motion
5 Actual and illusory differences in constant speed influence the perception of animacy similarly
6 Vision affects how fast we hear sounds move
7 Integration of sensory evidence in motion discrimination
8 Evidence for reciprocal antagonism between motion sensors tuned to coarse and fine features
9 The effects of viewing angle, camera angle, and sign of surface curvature on the perception of three-dimensional shape from texture
10 The temporal dynamics of selective attention of the visual periphery as measured by classification images
11 Orientation anisotropies in visual search revealed by noise
12 Flash suppression and flash facilitation in binocular rivalry
13 Dynamics of snakes and ladders
1 Stereomotion perception for a monocularly camouflaged stimulus
2 Effect of spatial distance to the task stimulus on task-irrelevant perceptual learning of static Gabors
3 Temporal contrast sensitivity during smooth pursuit eye movements
4 Spatial uncertainty explains exogenous and endogenous attentional cuing effects in visual signal detection
5 Adaptation minimizes distance-related audiovisual delays
6 Transfer of the face viewpoint aftereffect from adaptation to different and inverted faces
7 From filters to features: Scale–space analysis of edge and blur coding in human vision
8 Dynamics of perceptual filling-in of visual phantoms revealed by binocular rivalry
9 Ladder contours are undetectable in the periphery: A crowding effect?
10 Modification of the convexity prior but not the light-from-above prior in visual search with shaded objects
11 Interceptive timing: Prior knowledge matters
12 Reflecting on a room of one reflectance
13 Spatial contexts can inhibit a mislocalization of visual stimuli during smooth pursuit
14 How many objects can you track?: Evidence for a resource-limited attentive tracking mechanism
1 The temporal properties of the response of macaque ganglion cells and central mechanisms of flicker detection
2 The time course of attentive tracking
3 Dichoptic masking and binocular rivalry share common perceptual dynamics
4 The central fixation bias in scene viewing: Selecting an optimal viewing position independently of motor biases and image feature distributions
5 Extraocular muscle deformation assessed by motion-encoded MRI during eye movement in healthy subjects
6 Learning where to direct gaze during change detection
7 The sensitivity of light-evoked responses of retinal ganglion cells is decreased in nitric oxide synthase gene knockout mice
8 Spatiotemporal dynamics of visual attention during saccade preparation: Independence and coupling between attention and movement planning
9 Global and local attention in the attentional blink
10 The wallpaper illusion explained
11 Does spatial invariance result from insensitivity to change?
12 Searching in dynamic displays: Effects of configural predictability and spatiotemporal continuity
13 Extrafoveal viewing reveals the nature of second-order human vision
14 Perceptual load modulates conscious flicker perception
15 Topographical representation of binocular depth in the human visual cortex using fMRI
16 Task and context determine where you look
17 The relationship between temporal phase discrimination ability and the frequency doubling illusion
18 Feature-based attention modulates the perception of object contours
19 Color constancy improves, when an object moves: High-level motion influences color perception
20 Thalamic filtering of retinal spike trains by postsynaptic summation
Fall Vision Meeting



jov