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1 tical lines seem oppositely tilted (the tilt aftereffect).
2 not interfere with the orientation-specific aftereffect.
3 of the face does not interfere with the face aftereffect.
4 nutes, a phenomenon termed the ventriloquism aftereffect.
5 myopes were most susceptible to the nearwork aftereffect.
6 eraction by measuring the cross-modal motion aftereffect.
7 context of the phenomenon known as the shape aftereffect.
8 iases that are consistent with the direction aftereffect.
9 isensory stimuli, known as the ventriloquism aftereffect.
10 he adapting motion face led to a significant aftereffect.
11 on duration resembled traditional perceptual aftereffects.
12 is a general property for facial-expression aftereffects.
13 thin STS predict the magnitude of behavioral aftereffects.
14 able motion can generate consistent rotation aftereffects.
15 pe to account for well-documented perceptual aftereffects.
16 t's report for inducing stimuli versus their aftereffects.
17 proved focality and greater magnitude of its aftereffects.
18 ketamine's long-term perseverance-enhancing aftereffects.
19 ior ccPAS studies have focused on protocol's aftereffects.
20 les drove partial adaptation but no opposing aftereffects.
21 sugars inferred reduced perception of bitter aftereffects.
22 ming at the same rate and showed significant aftereffects.
23 ing negative afterimages, fading, and motion aftereffects.
24 ocessing, we examined the transfer of motion aftereffects.
25 sort of adaptive coding is the face-identity aftereffect [2, 3, 4, 5], in which adaptation to a parti
26 ry on the buildup of the threshold elevation aftereffect, a form of contrast adaptation thought to tr
27 irection, observers experienced a consistent aftereffect: a bistable PL walker, which could be percei
30 participants briefly exhibit an error-based aftereffect against the direction of the constraint, fol
31 daptation is sufficient to generate a motion aftereffect, an illusory sensation of movement experienc
32 test is to assess this initial accommodative aftereffect and its subsequent decay in the light under
33 orrelation between the magnitude of the tilt aftereffect and that of fMRI response adaptation in V1,
34 Results showed that the threshold-elevation aftereffect and the translational motion aftereffect wer
35 essing, because both the threshold-elevation aftereffect and translational motion aftereffect arise,
36 of adaptation is consistent with perceptual aftereffects and indicates that different cortical regio
37 th subjects of both sexes, account for short aftereffects and large savings after adaptation to large
38 r prolonged exposure to movement (the motion aftereffect), and exposure to tilted lines can make vert
39 oth psychophysically, by the behavioral tilt aftereffect, and physiologically, using fMRI response ad
40 s, effects of age and genetic factors on TBS aftereffects, and then summarize alterations of TMS-TBS
42 nts, we show this not to be the case: visual aftereffects are consistent with the simultaneous yet se
44 However, the neural mechanisms underlying PA aftereffects are poorly understood as only little neuroi
45 These characteristics of tactile distance aftereffects are similar to those of low-level visual af
47 evation aftereffect and translational motion aftereffect arise, at least in part, from adaptation at
48 We tested the novel hypothesis that the null aftereffect arises from the large difference in the back
49 the adapting and test stimuli can influence aftereffects, as in contingent adaptation; (2) weak or n
50 We have recently discovered a paradoxical aftereffect associated with inhibition in the gerbil aud
51 , adaptation to these stimuli induced a tilt aftereffect at the target location, consistent with sign
53 strate that a single, short SD has long-term aftereffects at the genomic regulatory level and highlig
55 irst time, present counterintuitive magnetic aftereffect behavior that is consistent with the mechani
56 cluding the correlation and forward/backward aftereffects between two reported orientations in a tria
57 (both sexes) for processes predictive of the aftereffect biases following the exposure to spatially o
58 re to tactile motion induces a visual motion aftereffect, biasing the perceived direction of counterp
59 y adaptation techniques to generate duration aftereffects: bidirectional distortions of perceived dur
60 ent with the Aschoff's rule, and entrainment aftereffects, both of which are properties described for
61 sharpening mechanisms contribute to the tilt aftereffect, but that they operate at different points i
63 by a new demonstration that a gaze direction aftereffect can be influenced by beliefs about the gazer
68 iases, including sensory illusions, adaptive aftereffects, choice history biases, central tendency ef
69 The resulting visuomotor adaptations and aftereffects demonstrated that the planned grip size, de
70 we report a novel cross-category adaptation aftereffect demonstrating that prolonged viewing of a hu
71 We further investigated the nature of the aftereffects, demonstrating that they are orientation- a
76 spatially disparate visual stimulus, and the aftereffect did not transfer across sounds that differed
79 different hands did result in contextualized aftereffects differing between hands across generalizati
83 caused a significant reduction of visuomotor aftereffect (F(1,137.8) = 6.133, P = 0.014) and retentio
85 multisensory and spatial memory mediate the aftereffect following both trial-wise and cumulative ada
88 e by measuring the audiovisual ventriloquism aftereffect for stimuli of varying visual reliability.
92 debated [9-11], though robust tactile motion aftereffects have recently been demonstrated [12, 13].
95 ealthy participants and patients, due to its aftereffect impacting on a number of visuospatial and vi
96 splaced visual stimuli induced ventriloquism aftereffect in both humans (approximately 50% of the dis
100 arent motion produced a robust visual motion aftereffect in the opposite direction, when measured in
102 , subjects exhibited a strong and persistent aftereffect in trials in which preparation time was limi
103 was shown to entail long-lasting therapeutic aftereffects in PD patients and related animal models.
106 correctly predict illusory changes - visual aftereffects - in movement direction, but in V1, they ar
108 We demonstrated the presence of a strong aftereffect, induced by the simultaneous presentation of
111 lus that generates the aftereffect or of the aftereffect itself, both of which can be seen clearly in
112 se impacts the strength of the visual motion aftereffect (MAE) during a subsequent test phase, and (i
113 hantom-inducing gratings can elicit a motion aftereffect (MAE) in the gap region, it is not known whe
116 elates with the strength of perceived motion aftereffect (MAE), the illusory motion of a stationary p
120 ielded correspondingly weak cross-cue motion aftereffects (MAEs) in the face of very strong within-cu
122 d a significant decrease after relearning in aftereffect magnitudes during no-feedback trials, a dire
124 ding and subsequent memory recall, revealing aftereffects more than 20 s after end of stimulation.
125 osity perception, giving rise to a repulsive aftereffect: motion to the left adapts small numbers, le
126 it remains debated whether the ventriloquism aftereffects observed following trial-wise and cumulativ
130 onal visuospatial, processes underlie the PA aftereffect of rightward-deviating prisms in healthy par
133 cantly with current symptomatology, and face aftereffects of children with elevated symptoms only one
137 e to the disturbances and produce short-term aftereffects of increased gait stability once the cables
138 adults showed alterations in USV observed as aftereffects of intoxication, despite greater initial bl
142 wo independent experiments revealed that the aftereffects of stop-signal training are negligible afte
143 high-resolution chronology of the immediate aftereffects of the Chicxulub impact event in the Wester
144 additional factor for Caribbean reefs is the aftereffects of the epizootic that reduced the abundance
145 second-order stimuli usually produces little aftereffect on first-order stimuli has been interpreted
146 in the structured environment; the negative aftereffect on path deviation was twice that in the spar
148 r coordination during pointing as well as to aftereffects on a number of sensorimotor and attention t
151 that discrepant multisensory evidence shapes aftereffects on distinct timescales via common neurophys
155 us has both acute and sustained long-lasting aftereffects on motor function in parkinsonian nonhuman
157 cles of non-24 h duration (T-cycles) induces aftereffects on period that act to bring the intrinsic p
159 egulation via reappraisal, and the immediate aftereffects on spontaneous (i.e., not instructed and au
162 y unaware of the stimulus that generates the aftereffect or of the aftereffect itself, both of which
163 tificial scotoma did not have any additional aftereffects over those of adaptation to a gray screen,
165 eye movements accompanied each blink, and an aftereffect persisted for a few blinks after target disp
168 c space, it is likely that the ventriloquism aftereffect reflects a change in the cortical representa
170 here report that the face identity-specific aftereffect requires a visible face; it is effectively c
171 This perceptual adaptation and the resulting aftereffect reveal important characteristics regarding h
172 wareness can nevertheless produce measurable aftereffects, revealing neural processes that do not dir
173 rception by asking whether the strong motion aftereffects seen in the perceptual domain lead to simil
174 daptation; (2) weak or null cross-adaptation aftereffects should be interpreted with caution; and (3)
175 V5 and psychophysical measures of the motion aftereffect showed reduced motion processing during high
177 macaque monkeys experience the ventriloquism aftereffect similar to the way humans do in all tested r
180 rameters that give rise to the ventriloquism aftereffect suggest that the changes in the cortical rep
182 onkeys, as well as humans, exhibit face-view aftereffect, suggesting the presence of a view-sensitive
183 cts are similar to those of low-level visual aftereffects, supporting the idea that distance percepti
187 otosensitivity was assessed using two visual aftereffects that occur after prolonged adaptation.
188 a given direction produced a tactile motion aftereffect, the illusion of motion in the opponent dire
192 nded) body states are necessary for separate aftereffects to emerge, suggesting that the role of sens
194 Consistent with previous findings, motion aftereffect transferred between vision and touch in a bi
197 this hypothesis, we first quantified the SF aftereffect using a psychophysical paradigm where human
202 se both the extended response to NPY and any aftereffect were blocked by coapplication of glutamate r
203 ion aftereffect and the translational motion aftereffect were reduced substantially during binocular
204 For excitability-diminishing tDCS and PAS, aftereffects were abolished or converted trendwise into
209 daptation function, as well as an attenuated aftereffect when relearning from the clamped feedback.
210 n the native blur of the better eye, with no aftereffect when the blur equaled the aberrations of the
212 he removal of the perturbation, there was an aftereffect, where the error was in the opposite directi
213 These stimuli generated robust duration aftereffects which showed partial selectivity for adapt-
214 accounts, we exploited the well-known "tilt aftereffect", which reflects adaptation to orientation i
216 ception in human subjects, the ventriloquism aftereffect, which presumably reflects a corresponding c
219 illusory movement is induced (via the motion aftereffect) within a stationary pattern, it can be show