F
Frans A. J. Verstraten
Researcher at University of Sydney
Publications - 160
Citations - 4597
Frans A. J. Verstraten is an academic researcher from University of Sydney. The author has contributed to research in topics: Motion perception & Binocular rivalry. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 154 publications receiving 4365 citations. Previous affiliations of Frans A. J. Verstraten include F.C. Donders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging & Radboud University Nijmegen.
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Interpolation and extrapolation on the path of apparent motion.
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that this representation of a moving object in an apparent motion display is maintained and updated even outside the locus of focused attention, and that it is possible to dissociate the contributions of interpolation and extrapolation mechanisms to an object's representation.
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Discrete color filling beyond luminance gaps along perceptual surfaces
TL;DR: The results indicate that color filling can be governed by a host of visual cues outside the realm of first-order color and brightness, via their impact on perceptual surface segmentation and segregation.
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Nulling the motion aftereffect with dynamic random-dot stimuli: limitations and implications.
TL;DR: It is shown that MAE strength at slow speed increases with eccentricity and that previous reports of high nulling percentages at slow speeds do not reflect strong MAEs, but are actually due to spatio-temporal aliasing, which dramatically increases coherence thresholds.
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The time course of attentive tracking.
Hinze Hogendoorn,Hinze Hogendoorn,Thomas A. Carlson,Thomas A. Carlson,Frans A. J. Verstraten +4 more
TL;DR: It is shown that when an external cue is available, attention can repeatedly shift between items remarkably quickly, and that during tracking, attentional shifts are likely synchronized to cue onsets rather than offsets.
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An investigation of the spatial selectivity of the duration after-effect.
TL;DR: Investigation of the spatial specificity of the duration after‐effect shows that adaptation to duration does not result from adaptation occurring early on in the visual processing hierarchy, and it seems likely that duration information is a high‐level stimulus property that is encoded later in theVisual processing hierarchy.