Abstract
It has been reported that the perceived speed of a target stimulus varies with its physical contrast (Thompson, 1982 Vision Research
Subjects reported which of two patterns appeared to move more quickly. Using a forced-choice method we compared performance with three different stimuli: simple gratings in linear motion, radial gratings in rotary motion, and Julesz random-dot patterns in linear motion. We further compared simultaneous and successive presentations.
For grating stimuli at slow speeds we obtained an effect of contrast which was greater for simultaneous presentations, thus replicating Stone and Thompson's results (1992 Vision Research
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