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No role for motion blur in either motion detection or motion based image segmentation

1998

Article

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Determined the influence of high-spatial-frequency losses induced by motion on motion detection and on motion-based image segmentation. Motion detection and motion-based segmentation tasks were performed with either spectrally low-pass or spectrally broadband stimuli. Performance on these tasks was compared with a condition having no motion but in which form differences mimicked the perceptual loss of high spatial frequencies produced by motion. This allowed the relative salience of motion and motion-induced blur to be determined. Neither image segmentation nor motion detection was sensitive to the high-spatial-frequency content of the stimuli. Thus the change in perceptual form produced in moving stimuli is not normally used as a cue either for motion detection or for motion-based image segmentation in ordinary situations.

Author(s): Wichmann, FA. and Henning, GB.
Journal: Journal of the Optical Society of America A
Volume: 15 (2)
Pages: 297-306
Year: 1998
Day: 0

Department(s): Empirical Inference
Bibtex Type: Article (article)

Digital: 0
Organization: Max-Planck-Gesellschaft
School: Biologische Kybernetik

Links: PDF

BibTex

@article{946,
  title = {No role for motion blur in either motion detection or motion based image segmentation},
  author = {Wichmann, FA. and Henning, GB.},
  journal = {Journal of the Optical Society of America A},
  volume = {15 (2)},
  pages = {297-306},
  organization = {Max-Planck-Gesellschaft},
  school = {Biologische Kybernetik},
  year = {1998},
  doi = {}
}