Some proprioceptive influences on the spatial displacement component of the oculogyral illusion John N. EvanoffJames R. Lackner OriginalPaper Pages: 526 - 530
The veridical perception of object temperature with varying skin temperature Mark F. Tritsch OriginalPaper Pages: 531 - 540
The relative accessibility of phonemes and syllables Dennis NorrisAnne Cutler OriginalPaper Pages: 541 - 550
A method to assess the relative contribution of lateral inhibition to the magnitude of visual-geometric illusions Stanley CorenClare PoracKazunori Morikawa OriginalPaper Pages: 551 - 558
The perception of visual motion during movements of the eyes and of the head Michael T. SwanstonNicholas J. Wade OriginalPaper Pages: 559 - 566
Interactions between real and subjective contours in the Bourdon illusion James T. WalkerMatthew D. Shank OriginalPaper Pages: 567 - 574
Feature sensitivity, bias, and interdependencies as a function of energy and payoffs James T. TownsendGary G. HuHelena Kadlec OriginalPaper Pages: 575 - 591
Effect of pixel width, display width, and number of alternative signal locations on the detection of a simple vertical-line signal in visual noise Bernard MouldenFred Kingdom OriginalPaper Pages: 592 - 598
Priming effects and the Deutsch scale illusion: Comments on “The effects of familiarity and previous training on perception of an ambiguous musical figure,” by Davidson, Power, and Michie Diana Deutsch Notes and comment Pages: 599 - 600
The combination of spatial frequency and orientation is effortlessly perceived Dov Sagi Notes and comment Pages: 601 - 603
Modeling the redundant signals effect by specifying the hazard function Hans Colonius Notes and comment Pages: 604 - 606
Redundant-target detection and processing capacity: The problem of positional preferences Paul A. MullinHoward E. EgethJ. Toby Mordkoff Notes and comment Pages: 607 - 610