Visual aftereffects of sequential perception: Dynamic adaptation to changes in texture density and contrast

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Abstract

Two new aftereffects are described in which the comparison of successively presented textures can be affected by prior exposure (adaptation) to biased sequences. A dynamic aftereffect of texture density can be produced using changes in non-Fourier texture density (using balanced-dot textures). An analogous dynamic aftereffect is demonstrated for texture contrast. These two effects are dissociated experimentally by the near absence of cross-adaptation. Evidence is also presented that the density effect is not one of texture motion (e.g. expansion/contraction of texture). © 2001 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Durgin, F. H., & Hammer, J. T. (2001). Visual aftereffects of sequential perception: Dynamic adaptation to changes in texture density and contrast. Vision Research, 41(20), 2607–2617. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0042-6989(01)00120-1

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