All Stories

  1. Geometric Constraints of Visual Space
  2. A study on the perspective quality of paintings by Canaletto of the Piazza San Marco
  3. Multiple Photographs of a Perspective Scene Reveal the Principles of Picture Perception
  4. Perspective Space as a Model for Distance and Size Perception
  5. Equidistant Intervals in Perspective Photographs and Paintings
  6. Intracranial Recordings of Occipital Cortex Responses to Illusory Visual Events
  7. The Perspective Structure of Visual Space
  8. Perception of Perspective Angles
  9. Evidence for Obliqueness of Angles as a Cue to Planar Surface Slant Found in Extremely Simple Symmetrical Shapes
  10. The extent of visual space inferred from perspective angles
  11. The retinal correlate of linear perspective in slant perception
  12. Computation and measurement of slant specified by linear perspective
  13. Virtual slant explains perceived slant, distortion, and motion in pictorial scenes
  14. A study investigating why Necker cubes are also bistable in binocular vision.
  15. Speed judgments of three-dimensional motion incorporate extraretinal information
  16. The horizontal tuning of face perception relies on the processing of intermediate and high spatial frequencies
  17. Stereo-Vision: Head-Centric Coding of Retinal Signals
  18. Depth cue combination in spontaneous eye movements
  19. Depth from rapidly alternating disparities
  20. The binding of motion to form is not direct but mediated by location signals
  21. Conscious selection of bi-stable 3D percepts described by neural population codes
  22. Evidence for two binocular colour mechanisms
  23. Task influences on the dynamic properties of fast eye movements
  24. Removal of monocular interactions equates rivalry behavior for monocular, binocular, and stimulus rivalries
  25. The Role of Temporally Coarse Form Processing during Binocular Rivalry
  26. Dichoptic masking and binocular rivalry share common perceptual dynamics
  27. Depth cues, rather than perceived depth, govern vergence
  28. Coarse-to-fine eye movement strategy in visual search
  29. Monocular symmetry in binocular vision
  30. A single motion system suffices for global-motion perception
  31. A Single System Explains Human Speed Perception
  32. Coordination of smooth pursuit and saccades
  33. Temporal Properties of Disparity Processing Revealed by Dynamic Random-Dot Stereograms
  34. Differences in perceived depth for temporally correlated and uncorrelated dynamic random-dot stereograms
  35. Properties of 3D rotations and their relation to eye movement control
  36. Spatial-scale interaction in human stereoscopic vision in response to sustained and transient stimuli
  37. Mechanical interdependence of version and vergence eye movements
  38. Vertical Disparity Can Alter Perceived Direction
  39. Cause of kinematic differences during centrifugal and centripetal saccades
  40. Multi-coloured stereograms unveil two binocular colour mechanisms in human vision
  41. The role of the cyclopean eye in vision: sometimes inappropriate, always irrelevant
  42. Strength of depth effects induced by three types of vertical disparity
  43. A computational model of depth perception based on headcentric disparity
  44. A comparison of curvatures of left and right hand movements in a simple pointing task
  45. Adjustment of fixation duration in visual search
  46. Gaze-shift dynamics in two kinds of sequential looking tasks
  47. Capture of Visual Direction: an Unexpected Phenomenon in Binocular Vision
  48. A model of the human smooth pursuit system based on an unsupervised adaptive controller
  49. Temporal aspects of binocular slant perception
  50. Initial directions and landing positions of binocular saccades
  51. The function of visual search and memory in sequential looking tasks
  52. Voluntary binocular gaze-shifts in the plane of regard: Dynamics of version and vergence
  53. Binocular Perception of Slant about Oblique Axes Relative to a Visual Frame of Reference
  54. Binocular Correspondence and Visual Direction
  55. The Initial Direction and Landing Position of Saccades
  56. Binocular Visual Direction
  57. Task-dependent differences between mono- and bi-articular heads of the triceps brachii muscle
  58. Simultaneous hand tracking does not affect human vergence pursuit
  59. Selective adaptation of internally triggered saccades made to visual targets
  60. The relationship between absolute disparity and ocular vergence
  61. Coordination of Head and Eyes during the Performance of Natural (and Unnatural) Visual Tasks
  62. Effect of Freeing the Head on Eye Movement Characteristics during Three-Dimensional Shifts of Gaze and Tracking
  63. Influences of hand movements on eye movements in tracking tasks in man
  64. Control of vergence: Gating among disparity inputs by voluntary target selection
  65. Dependence of autogenic and heterogenic stretch reflexes on pre-load activity in the human arm.
  66. Coordination of hand movements and saccades: evidence for a common and a separate pathway
  67. Ocular Vergence Under Natural Conditions. I. Continuous Changes of Target Distance Along the Median Plane
  68. Ocular Vergence Under Natural Conditions. II. Gaze Shifts Between Real Targets Differing in Distance and Direction
  69. Binocular co-ordination of human horizontal saccadic eye movements.
  70. Binocular co-ordination of human vertical saccadic eye movements.
  71. Fusional limits for a large random-dot stereogram
  72. Reflex sensitivity of human jaw-closing muscles during the silent period following a jaw jerk