Abstract

This study investigated the effect of exposure duration on the perceived direction of cyclopean Type I and Type II plaids moving in the X/ Y plane. The cyclopean plaids were created from grating components defined by binocular disparity embedded in a dynamic random-dot stereogram. The results showed that the cyclopean Type I plaid appeared to move in the intersection-of-constraints (IOC) direction across the range of exposures tested. However, the cyclopean Type II plaids appeared to move in a direction different from the IOC with short exposures but near the IOC with long exposures. This perceived directional shift was also obtained with luminance-defined Type II plaids. A common pattern-motion mechanism that processes cyclopean and luminance motion signals appears responsible for the perceived directional shift of the Type II plaids.

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