Roberto Arrighi, David Alais, David Burr. Vision Res 2005
Times Cited: 18
Times Cited: 18
Times Cited
Times Co-cited
Similarity
The "Flash-Lag" effect occurs in audition and cross-modally.
David Alais, David Burr. Curr Biol 2003
David Alais, David Burr. Curr Biol 2003
72
Illusory spatial offset of a flash relative to a moving stimulus is caused by differential latencies for moving and flashed stimuli.
D Whitney, I Murakami, P Cavanagh. Vision Res 2000
D Whitney, I Murakami, P Cavanagh. Vision Res 2000
44
Perceptual stability of a stroboscopically lit visual field containing self-luminous objects.
D M MACKAY. Nature 1958
D M MACKAY. Nature 1958
44
Motion integration and postdiction in visual awareness.
D M Eagleman, T J Sejnowski. Science 2000
D M Eagleman, T J Sejnowski. Science 2000
44
Temporal recruitment along the trajectory of moving objects and the perception of position.
B Krekelberg, M Lappe. Vision Res 1999
B Krekelberg, M Lappe. Vision Res 1999
44
Motion extrapolation is not responsible for the flash-lag effect.
E Brenner, J B Smeets. Vision Res 2000
E Brenner, J B Smeets. Vision Res 2000
38
38
Moving ahead through differential visual latency.
G Purushothaman, S S Patel, H E Bedell, H Ogmen. Nature 1998
G Purushothaman, S S Patel, H E Bedell, H Ogmen. Nature 1998
38
The ventriloquist effect results from near-optimal bimodal integration.
David Alais, David Burr. Curr Biol 2004
David Alais, David Burr. Curr Biol 2004
27
27
Humans integrate visual and haptic information in a statistically optimal fashion.
Marc O Ernst, Martin S Banks. Nature 2002
Marc O Ernst, Martin S Banks. Nature 2002
27
Neuronal latencies and the position of moving objects.
B Krekelberg, M Lappe. Trends Neurosci 2001
B Krekelberg, M Lappe. Trends Neurosci 2001
27
Analogous mechanisms compensate for neural delays in the sensory and the motor pathways: evidence from motor flash-lag.
Romi Nijhawan, Kuno Kirschfeld. Curr Biol 2003
Romi Nijhawan, Kuno Kirschfeld. Curr Biol 2003
27
The role of attention in motion extrapolation: are moving objects 'corrected' or flashed objects attentionally delayed?
B Khurana, K Watanabe, R Nijhawan. Perception 2000
B Khurana, K Watanabe, R Nijhawan. Perception 2000
27
Is there an auditory-visual flash-lag effect?
Trevor J Hine, Amanda M V White, Mark Chappell. Clin Exp Ophthalmol 2003
Trevor J Hine, Amanda M V White, Mark Chappell. Clin Exp Ophthalmol 2003
55
Temporal ventriloquism: sound modulates the flash-lag effect.
Jean Vroomen, Beatrice de Gelder, Jean Vroomen. J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform 2004
Jean Vroomen, Beatrice de Gelder, Jean Vroomen. J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform 2004
27
Distortion in perceived image size accompanies flash lag in depth.
Terence C P Lee, Sieu K Khuu, Wang Li, Anthony Hayes. J Vis 2008
Terence C P Lee, Sieu K Khuu, Wang Li, Anthony Hayes. J Vis 2008
55
The Fröhlich effect: a consequence of the interaction of visual focal attention and metacontrast.
K Kirschfeld, T Kammer. Vision Res 1999
K Kirschfeld, T Kammer. Vision Res 1999
27
Marker correspondence, not processing latency, determines temporal binding of visual attributes.
Shin'ya Nishida, Alan Johnston. Curr Biol 2002
Shin'ya Nishida, Alan Johnston. Curr Biol 2002
22
A direct demonstration of perceptual asynchrony in vision.
K Moutoussis, S Zeki. Proc Biol Sci 1997
K Moutoussis, S Zeki. Proc Biol Sci 1997
22
Differential latencies and the dynamics of the position computation process for moving targets, assessed with the flash-lag effect.
Haluk Oğmen, Saumil S Patel, Harold E Bedell, Kaan Camuz. Vision Res 2004
Haluk Oğmen, Saumil S Patel, Harold E Bedell, Kaan Camuz. Vision Res 2004
22
The attentional modulation of the flash-lag effect.
M V C Baldo, J Namba. Braz J Med Biol Res 2002
M V C Baldo, J Namba. Braz J Med Biol Res 2002
26
Stopping the motion and sleuthing the flash-lag effect: spatial uncertainty is the key to perceptual mislocalization.
Ryota Kanai, Bhavin R Sheth, Shinsuke Shimojo. Vision Res 2004
Ryota Kanai, Bhavin R Sheth, Shinsuke Shimojo. Vision Res 2004
22
Evidence for an attentional component of the perceptual misalignment between moving and flashing stimuli.
Marcus V C Baldo, Alexandre H Kihara, Janaina Namba, Stanley A Klein. Perception 2002
Marcus V C Baldo, Alexandre H Kihara, Janaina Namba, Stanley A Klein. Perception 2002
22
A model of the perceived relative positions of moving objects based upon a slow averaging process.
B Krekelberg, M Lappe. Vision Res 2000
B Krekelberg, M Lappe. Vision Res 2000
22
Visual prediction: psychophysics and neurophysiology of compensation for time delays.
Romi Nijhawan. Behav Brain Sci 2008
Romi Nijhawan. Behav Brain Sci 2008
22
Extrapolating movement without retinal motion.
J Schlag, R H Cai, A Dorfman, A Mohempour, M Schlag-Rey. Nature 2000
J Schlag, R H Cai, A Dorfman, A Mohempour, M Schlag-Rey. Nature 2000
22
Flash-lag effect: differential latency, not postdiction.
S S Patel, H Ogmen, H E Bedell, V Sampath. Science 2000
S S Patel, H Ogmen, H E Bedell, V Sampath. Science 2000
22
The position of moving objects.
B Krekelberg, M Lappe, D Whitney, P Cavanagh, D M Eagleman, T J Sejnowski. Science 2000
B Krekelberg, M Lappe, D Whitney, P Cavanagh, D M Eagleman, T J Sejnowski. Science 2000
22
22
22
The flash-lag effect and related mislocalizations: findings, properties, and theories.
Timothy L Hubbard. Psychol Bull 2014
Timothy L Hubbard. Psychol Bull 2014
22
Predictability and the dynamics of position processing in the flash-lag effect.
Dawn Vreven, Preeti Verghese. Perception 2005
Dawn Vreven, Preeti Verghese. Perception 2005
22
Perceptual latencies are shorter for motion towards the fovea than for motion away.
S Mateeff, J Hohnsbein. Vision Res 1988
S Mateeff, J Hohnsbein. Vision Res 1988
22
Reduction of the flash-lag effect in terms of active observation.
Makoto Ichikawa, Yuko Masakura. Atten Percept Psychophys 2010
Makoto Ichikawa, Yuko Masakura. Atten Percept Psychophys 2010
40
The role of uncertainty in the systematic spatial mislocalization of moving objects.
Eli Brenner, Robert J van Beers, Gerben Rotman, Jeroen B J Smeets. J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform 2006
Eli Brenner, Robert J van Beers, Gerben Rotman, Jeroen B J Smeets. J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform 2006
22
Manual control of the visual stimulus reduces the flash-lag effect.
Makoto Ichikawa, Yuko Masakura. Vision Res 2006
Makoto Ichikawa, Yuko Masakura. Vision Res 2006
22
Observer's control of the moving stimulus increases the flash-lag effect.
Lisa Scocchia, Rossana Actis Grosso, Claudio de'Sperati, Natale Stucchi, Gabriel Baud-Bovy. Vision Res 2009
Lisa Scocchia, Rossana Actis Grosso, Claudio de'Sperati, Natale Stucchi, Gabriel Baud-Bovy. Vision Res 2009
40
The flash-lag effect is reduced when the flash is perceived as a sensory consequence of our action.
Joan López-Moliner, Daniel Linares. Vision Res 2006
Joan López-Moliner, Daniel Linares. Vision Res 2006
22
Analysis of motion of the visual field by direction, expansion/contraction, and rotation cells clustered in the dorsal part of the medial superior temporal area of the macaque monkey.
K Tanaka, H Saito. J Neurophysiol 1989
K Tanaka, H Saito. J Neurophysiol 1989
16
Co-cited is the co-citation frequency, indicating how many articles cite the article together with the query article. Similarity is the co-citation as percentage of the times cited of the query article or the article in the search results, whichever is the lowest. These numbers are calculated for the last 100 citations when articles are cited more than 100 times.