Abstract

This study investigated the perception of bistable stroboscopic motion (Ternus display) with cyclopean stimuli created from retinal disparity embedded in dynamic random-element stereograms, the responses to which arise at binocular-integration levels of the visual system. To provide comparison data, observers were also tested with luminance-domain stimuli matched as closely as possible to their cyclopean counterparts. The results showed that the perception of element vs group movement was similar for both stimulus domains: element movement predominated at short interstimulus intervals (ISIs) while group movement predominated at long ISIs, and there was a tendency for a greater percentage of group movement to occur with a longer frame duration. These results cast suspicion on the interpretation of bistable motion that assumes element movement is a signature of a lower-level, short-range motion system whereas group movement is a signature of a higher-level, long-range system; both percepts are engendered at binocular-integration levels of vision.

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