Abstract
The spatial parameters underlying a novel illusion of relative motion are characterized. A simple stimulus composed of two sine-wave gratings was sufficient to generate the illusion. We measured the response of subjects to rapid, small-amplitude oscillations of this stimulus behind a fixation point. The effect was clearly strongest for acute angles between the gratings, but only when spatial frequency was between 6 and 11 cpd. We surmise that activity in the grating cells of the primate visual cortex (von der Heydt, Peterhans, & Dursteler, 1992) might be the cause of the illusion. The illusion is potentially an important tool in understanding how higher cortical areas combine disparate motion signals.
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CITATION STYLE
Hine, T., Cook, M., & Rogers, G. T. (1997). The Ouchi illusion: An anomaly in the perception of rigid motion for limited spatial frequencies and angles. Perception and Psychophysics, 59(3), 448–455. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03211911
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