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Related Concept Videos

Depth Perception and Spatial Vision01:15

Depth Perception and Spatial Vision

Depth perception is the ability to perceive objects three-dimensionally. It relies on two types of cues: binocular and monocular. Binocular cues depend on the combination of images from both eyes and how the eyes work together. Since the eyes are in slightly different positions, each eye captures a slightly different image. This disparity between images, known as binocular disparity, helps the brain interpret depth. When the brain compares these images, it determines the distance to an object.

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The meaningfulness of searching for minimal exposure duration to understand visual perception.

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Perceptual learning without feedback is accompanied with systematic changes in confidence processing.

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When is "now"? In the past to compensate for the sensation of time or in the future as a prediction of the temporal sensory horizon?

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Natural scene segmentation dynamics reveal iterative Bayesian inference.

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Mask contrast and size do not alter suppression depth in the tracking continuous flash suppression paradigm.

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Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 22, 2026

Eye Movements in Visual Duration Perception: Disentangling Stimulus from Time in Predecisional Processes
09:27

Eye Movements in Visual Duration Perception: Disentangling Stimulus from Time in Predecisional Processes

Published on: January 19, 2024

Synchronized audio-visual transients drive efficient visual search for motion-in-depth.

Marina Zannoli1, John Cass, Pascal Mamassian

  • 1Université Paris Descartes, Sorbonne Paris Cité, Paris, France. marinazannoli@gmail.com

Plos One
|May 23, 2012
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Transient auditory cues, specifically square-wave loudness modulations, significantly enhance visual search for depth-defined targets. This suggests sound can effectively guide attention in visual search tasks involving disparity.

Failed At:

2026-06-19T13:43:29.927485+00:00

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