About: Barberpole illusion is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 9 publications have been published within this topic receiving 269 citations. The topic is also known as: Barber-pole illusion.
TL;DR: It is shown that the perceived direction of motion of the pattern is largely determined by the directions of motion at the edges, rather than by the aspect ratio or global shape of the aperture, which corresponds well with a quadrature model of motion perception.
TL;DR: In this article, a neural model simulating parts of the motion and the form pathway of the visual cortex is presented, where the visual features motion, disparity, and form are represented in a distributed way in areas V1, V2, and MT mutually interact at several levels.
Abstract: In this work, we present a neural model simulating parts of the motion and the form pathway of the visual cortex. It is shown how the visual features motion, disparity, and form that are represented in a distributed way in areas V1, V2, and MT mutually interact at several levels. Thus, their information is shared without the need of explicit neural representation for each combination of features. In particular, we address the issue of 2D extrinsic motion cues generated at occlusions that have to be treated differently than 2D intrinsic motion features of the same object. We suggest that here information of the form channel, namely the indication of a junction, is necessary to achieve a correct percept in the motion pathway. Furthermore, we investigated the question of how a percept of either pattern or component motion is generated in a scenario of moving bars that only differs in the presence or absence of occlusions, like in the chopstick and the barberpole display. We propose different roles for various kinds of MT cells that are involved in the interactions with the form pathway, simulating purely integrative cells tuned to motion and to motion and stereo, but also contrast cells responding strongly when motion in the surround is in the opposite direction. The model simulations reproduce psychophysical and neurophysiological results of the chopstick as well as of the barberpole illusion. The temporal course of the dominant motion percept generated by the iterative interplay between motion and form pathway is in line with data of ocular following responses in primates and humans.
TL;DR: The authors showed that the ability of moving contours to determine the perceived motion of untextured contours is strongly constrained by whether contour terminators are classified as intrinsic or extrinsic (belonging to a surface occluding a moving contour).
TL;DR: It is suggested that the visual system is posed with solving an ambiguity other than the traditionally acknowledged aperture problem of determining the direction of motion of the drifting grating in the context of the roles of occlusion, component-motion, and contour relationships in the interpretation of motion information.