29 European Conference on Visual Perception
St-Petersburg, Russia
20-25 August 2006


Important Note: The abstracts presented on this website have not yet been updated with author corrections and publisher revisions. See printed abstract book for most recent versions.

Poster Sessions  -  Wednesday, 23 August 2006
Visual function: testing and treatment    Wednesday 09:00-18:00   /   Attended  10:30-11:30
 1  G Ikaunieks   Light scattering effect on central and peripheral visual acuity
 2  S A Koskin   Subjective measurements of visual acuity using vanishing figures
 3  I Rudoy   Visual system internal noise and traditional clinical symptoms
 4  A C Kooijman   Impaired perception of moving high- and low-contrast optotypes by Bradyopsia patients lacking RGS9
 5  T V Degtyarenko   Neuromodulating effects of phosphenelectrostimulation
 6  M S Tibber   The oblique effect in migraine
 7  S Muravyova   The properties of internal noise of visual system in patients with multiple sclerosis
 8  H O Richter   Contrast sensitivity leads in young asthenopes during voluntary efforts to accommodation under quasi monochromatic low wavelength viewing conditions
 9  A N Shandurina   Sensory and mental brain function after electrical stimulation
 10  S Tsermentseli   Imaging processing of form and motion coherence in Asperger syndrome
 11  A D Wilson   Sticky attention in autistic spectrum disorder - visual psychophysics and movement
 12  I V Tsapenko   Selecarten and Phospholuten improve the retinal function in the experimental damage of rabbit retina
 13  I M Boychuk   The phosphenelectropuncture as a new method of restoration the accommodation in patients with accommodative disfunction.
 14  A M Iftime   Computer simulations of spatial misperceptions in amblyopic vision
 15  N A Krasnoperova   A general assessment of visual functions in auditory impaired adults
 16  L Schmalzl   Congenital prosopagnosia: A family study
 17  M Barekatain   Motion discrimination in acute mania: A decision-making study
 18  V A Kolomiets   A new method of stereoamblyopia treatment on the basis of a binocular retinal photostimulation with patterns of spatial-depth orientation
 19  E L Efimova   Training software in treatment of amblyopia
 20  M Roinishvili   Complex contextual suppression in schizophrenic patients
 21  D Spinelli   Defective top-down feedback to visual cortical areas in patients with neglect
 22  C-C Carbon   What can we learn from prosopagnosia about face processing?
 23  P E G Bestelmeyer   Are temporal and spatial characteristics of visual scan paths heritable?
 24  V V Kolbanov   Visual functions dynamics at visual fatigue
 25  M Ozolinsh   Scattering induced luminance and colour contrast decrease in visual perception
 26  K Ruparelia   Biological motion and face perception in autistic spectrum disorder
 27  J P M de Sousa   Facial emotion recognition is affected in social phobia and panic disorder
 28  F Gosselin   The role of the amygdala in the recognition of fearful faces
 29  M Tamm   Fatigue in a motion onset detection task
Vision through the eyes of animals    Wednesday 09:00-18:00   /   Attended  10:30-11:30
 30  O Y Orlov   Has Lagurus luteus colour vision?
 31  C Niggebrügge   Classical conditioning of coloured stimuli in the honeybee, Apis mellifera
 32  O Riabinina   Active vision in landmark learning by bumblebees
 33  I P Shepeleva   Comparative morphology and optics of gastropod eyes (gastropoda: pulmonata: stylommatophora)
 34  K Yamazato   How do foraging Papilio butterflies see polarized light?
 35  E Mascalzoni   Cast shadows allow for solid objects discrimination in visually naïve newborn chicks (Gallus gallus)
 36  A B Lall   Is colour vision utilized for the detection of the bioluminescent colours of the night among beetles (coleoptera: lampyridae and elateridae)?
 37  M Wicklein   Bees use relational learning rules in colour learning tasks
 38  W M Harmening   Vernier acuity in barn owls
 39  S Liebe   The contribution of color to visual memory performance in the non-human primate
 40  M Fabre-Thorpe   Rapid visual categorisation of natural images in macaque monkeys is orientation invariant
 41  M M Steurer   Prototype effects without peak shift in pigeons
 42  M J Henze   Haze, clouds and a restricted field of view: Can crickets make use of their polarization compass under unfavorable sky conditions?
 43  G Zaccardi   Opsin expression in the eyes of Heliconius erato
 44  A Kezeli   Participation of chromatic channels in lightness discrimination in cats
 45  U E Siebeck   A private communication channel for coral reef fish based on UV signalling
 46  M Pollirer   Group dynamics in the hunting behaviour of archerfish (Toxotes chatareus): A laboratory analysis
 47  W Apfalter   Categorical versus dimensional perception of human faces by pigeons using a multiple-matching procedure
Optic Flow    Wednesday 09:00-18:00   /   Attended  10:30-11:30
 48  P A Warren   The flow parsing hypothesis: Control studies supporting a new role for optic flow
 49  R Daini   The effect of noise and prism adaptation on optic flow
 50  P Bayerl   Estimating heading and collisions with the environment from curvilinear self-motion in optical flow patterns
 51  J Duijnhouwer   Superimposed uniform motion shifts the focus of a contracting optic flow field less than the focus of expansion
 52  Z Fan   Forward and backward self-motion distort perceived heading during eccentric viewing along opposite directions
Heading and orienting in visual space    Wednesday 09:00-18:00   /   Attended  10:30-11:30
 53  H Koesling   Mapping auditory instructions onto gaze trajectories: How attention is guided by driver-assistant systems
 54     late withdrawal
 55  R M Wilkie   Active Gaze, visual look-ahead and locomotor control
 56  M Ohmi   Cognitive task could prevent deterioration of brain activity during longtime drive on monotonous motorway
 57  M Hofbauer   Effects of relative object size on perceived distance and time-to-collision under monocular viewing
Vision and Action    Wednesday 09:00-18:00   /   Attended  15:30-16:30
 58  B F M Marino   Manual asymmetries in visually guided pointing of right- and left-handers
 59  C Hesse   Grasping: A stereotyped visuomotor pattern?
 60  T Hayashi   A study of visual target image representation during reaching and grasping toward a Muller-Lyer object
 61  Y Coello   Linguistic and spatial cue for action
 62  Y Coello   Perceiving what is reachable: Evidence for visuomotor interactions
 63  D G Woolley   Interference between two opposing visuomotor rotations varies depending on the level of separation in motor workspace
 64  L Minini   Grasping three- and two-dimensional targets: No effect of target dimensionality on manual prehension
 65  I Ivanov   The role of colour in visually guided actions
 66  J Lommertzen   Grasping completions: Towards a new paradigm
 67  M Kitazaki   Effects of depth order on visual control of posture and vection are opposite
 68  M Stritzke   Effects of feedback on eye-hand coordination during movement under risk
 69  S Buetti   Deviation of manual responses toward a to-be-ignored stimulus location: Distractor inhibition revisited
 70  G Buckingham   Reflections on bimanual phase shifting under different visual conditions
 71  L Scocchia   The specificity of motor control in perceiving the flash-lag effect
 72  J-P Orliaguet   Awareness of one’s own reaching movement: Integration of visual and motor signal
 73  S Ohtsuka   Motion distance perception during active head movements
 74  T Kawahara   Effects of training of remote-manipulation by a real hand on performance of tracking a virtual object with a virtual hand
 75     late withdrawal
 76  A Hannus   Visual selection is determined by action intention
 77  A Casile   Motor expertise and the visual perception of biological motion
 78  M HUDSON   Social cues of attention mediate representational momentum
Attention, Visual Search, Change detection, Change blindness    Wednesday 09:00-18:00   /   Attended  15:30-16:30
 79  J Wagemans   Target-distractor similarity in visual search for line segments with specific curvature and orientation
 80  K Ishibashi   Target frequency effect in visual search
 81  Y Yagi   The mere exposure effect on attended and ignored stimuli
 82  P Vetter   Subitizing made difficult: Effects of attentional set on visual enumeration
 83  T Inukai   Top-down inhibition for an irrelevant stimulus in attentional capture
 84  T Shimomura   Attending to the object defined with multiple primitive objects
 85  A Pastukhov   Perceptual rivalry in the complete absence of attention
 86  G Rinkenauer   Focussed attention in real three-dimensional space
 87  E Vul   Quantitative prediction of errors in RSVP: modeling the time course of suppression during the attentional blink
 88  M I García-Ogueta   Location effects on attentional capture
 89  A Burmester   Capacity limits for the detection of changing visual features
 90  C Bordier   Attentional mechanisms modulate the evolution of IT cortical activity during object perception
 91  V N Chihman   Visual search of objects with different orientation
 92  J McBride   Feature type modulates priming in visual search
 93     late withdrawal
 94  P M Pearson   The role of endogenous orienting in change detection: Does attentional processing differ in the one-shot and flicker paradigms?
 95  L-C Hsu   Role of eye movement and attention on temporary blindness and target reappearance
 96  E Gavault   How the type of cueing interacts with image properties in visual short-term memory storage
 97  F Taya   Tne role of attention in change detection task
 98  V Kozyrev   Attention improves the perception of speed but not direction changes in the transparent motion
 99  A Ignashchenkova   Movement neurons in the frontal eye field are not activated by covert shifts of both exogenous and endogenous attention
 100  M A Bozhinskaya   Visual search of the second order stimuli
 101  M Milders   Attention-induced motion blindness and the effect of distractor inhibition
 102  B Olk   Interaction of reflexive and volitional orienting
 103  F Pestilli   Exogenous attention reduces the effect of contrast adaptation by increasing contrast sensitivity
 104  M L T Vergeer   Change Blindness: Effects of changing the location of change
 105  R van Ee   Attentional control over either of the two competing percepts for the Necker Cube
 106  L Zhaoping   Visual search with and without target object recognition
 107  G Anderson   Top-down modulation in inefficient search: Evidence of differences between orientation and colour cuing
 108  G Campana   Interaction between FOR and IOR facilitates visual search
 109  A Kristjansson   Simultaneous but independent priming of different features of a single object in visual search
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