Guest editorial
Features derived from first-order motion mechanisms predict anomalies in motion perception 9 – 19
Linda Bowns
Efficient search for size targets on a background texture gradient: Is detection guided by discontinuities in the retinal-size gradient of items? 21 – 48
Andrew Found, Hermann J Müller
Spatially parallel processing of within-dimension conjunctions 49 – 60
Karina J Linnell, Glyn W Humphreys
Brain areas sensitive to coherent visual motion 61 – 72
Oliver J Braddick, Justin M D O'Brien, John Wattam-Bell, Janette Atkinson, Tom Hartley, Robert Turner
Configural features in the context of upright and inverted faces 73 – 83
Helmut Leder, Gian Candrian, Oswald Huber, Vicki Bruce
Developmental changes in the effect of inversion: Using a picture book to investigate face recognition 85 – 94
Nicola A Brace, Graham J Hole, Richard I Kemp, Graham E Pike, Michael Van Duuren, Lorraine Norgate
Perceptual learning without feedback and the stability of stereoscopic slant estimation 95 – 114
Raymond van Ee
Distance perception within near visual space 115 – 124
Alain Viguier, Gilles Clément, Yves Trotter
Last but not least
Reviews 129 – 130
Benton on De Valois (Ed.): Seeing
Editorial
The role of attention in temporal integration 135 – 145
Troy A W Visser, James T Enns
Eye-movement control in direction-coded visual search 147 – 157
Harold H Greene, Keith Rayner
The effect of contrast on vertical motion processing asymmetries in 11-week-old infants 159 – 166
John Wattam-Bell
Development of infants' sensitivity to surface contour information for spatial layout 167 – 176
Maya G Sen, Albert Yonas, David C Knill
Large errors in the perception of verticality are generated by luminance borders (integrated across space) not by subjective borders 177 – 184
Donatella Spinelli, Gabriella Antonucci, Maria Luisa Martelli, Pierluigi Zoccolotti
The role of the centre of projection in the estimation of slant from texture of planar surfaces 185 – 193
Stefaan Tibau, Bert Willems, Erik Van Den Bergh, Johan Wagemans
'Perceiving the present' as a framework for ecological explanations of the misperception of projected angle and angular size 195 – 208
Mark A Changizi
The glare effect and the perception of luminosity 209 – 222
Daniele Zavagno, Giovanni Caputo
High-spatial-frequency tritanopia: S-filling-in or S-filtering-out? 223 – 232
Alexander D Logvinenko
Expertise and the perception of kinematic and situational probability information 233 – 252
Bruce Abernethy, Danny P Gill, Sheri L Parks, Stephen T Packer
Last but not least
Reviews 259 – 260
Navarro on Atchison, Smith: Optics of the human eye
Guest editorial
The flash-lag phenomenon: object motion and eye movements 263 – 282
Romi Nijhawan
Temporal and spatial characteristics of attention to facilitate manual and eye-movement responses 283 – 302
Yasuto Tanaka, Shinsuke Shimojo
Computational and performance aspects of PCA-based face-recognition algorithms 303 – 321
Hyeonjoon Moon, P Jonathon Phillips
Recognising the style of spatially exaggerated tennis serves 323 – 338
Frank E Pollick, Cali Fidopiastis, Vic Braden
The role of junctions in surface completion and contour matching 339 – 366
Nava Rubin
The integration of orientation information in the motion correspondence problem 367 – 380
Simon Prince, Shani Offen, Bruce G Cumming, Richard A Eagle
The influence of verbal labeling on the perception of odors: Evidence for olfactory illusions? 381 – 391
Rachel S Herz, Julia von Clef
Last but not least
Reviews 397 – 398
Nation on Bloom: How children learn the meanings of words
Guest editorial
A prior for global convexity in local shape-from-shading 403 – 410
Michael S Langer, Heinrich H Bülthoff
The backward inclination of a surface defined by empirical corresponding points 411 – 429
Philip M Grove, Hirohiko Kaneko, Hiroshi Ono
Ambiguity and the 'mental eye' in pictorial relief 431 – 448
Jan J Koenderink, Andrea J van Doorn, Astrid M L Kappers, James T Todd
The influence of presentation format and viewer training in the visual arts on the perception of pictorial and aesthetic qualities of paintings 449 – 465
Paul J Locher, Jeffrey K Smith, Lisa F Smith
Classical and inverted White's effects 467 – 488
Caterina Ripamonti, Walter Gerbino
Motion capture depends on signal strength 489 – 510
Elena Festa-Martino, Leslie Welch
Velocity not acceleration of self-motion mediates vestibular - visual interaction 511 – 518
Rainer Loose, Thomas Probst
Last but not least
Reviews 523 – 524
McSorley on Yantis (Ed.): Visual perception
Guest editorial
The Fourier theory of vision 531 – 541
Gerald Westheimer
Evaluating models of collinearity judgment for reliability and scale 543 – 558
Ernest Greene, William Frawley
On the interference of task-irrelevant hue variation on texture segmentation 559 – 569
Pauline M Pearson, Fred A A Kingdom
Visual discomfort: the influence of spatial frequency 571 – 581
Elizabeth Conlon, William Lovegrove, Susan Barker, Eugene Chekaluk
Visually induced reorientation illusions 583 – 600
Ian P Howard, Gang Hu
Haptic perception of the horizontal by blind and low-vision individuals 601 – 610
Morton A Heller, Deneen D Brackett, Eric Scroggs, Angela C Allen, Shavonda Green
Attractiveness of facial averageness and symmetry in non-Western cultures: In search of biologically based standards of beauty 611 – 625
Gillian Rhodes, Sakiko Yoshikawa, Alison Clark, Kieran Lee, Ryan McKay, Shigeru Akamatsu
Rock's cognitive theory of illusory figures: a commentary 627 – 631
Theodore E Parks
The brain may know more than cognitive theory can tell us: a reply to Ted Parks 633 – 636
Birgitta Dresp, Lothar Spillmann
Last but not least
Reviews 647 – 650
Carey on Humphreys (Ed.): Case studies in the neuropsychology of vision
Editorial
Is it a bird? Is it a plane? Ultra-rapid visual categorisation of natural and artifactual objects 655 – 668
Rufin VanRullen, Simon J Thorpe
Adaptation reveals a neural code for the visual location of orientation change 669 – 680
Nicolaas Prins, Alexander J Mussap
Perceived depth of 3-D objects in 3-D scenes 681 – 692
Craig W Sauer, Asad Saidpour, Myron L Braunstein, George J Andersen
The absence of depth constancy in contour stereograms 693 – 705
Dawn Vreven, Leslie Welch
Imperfect invariance to object translation in the discrimination of complex shapes 707 – 724
Marcus Dill, Shimon Edelman
Stereomotion speed perception is contrast dependent 725 – 731
Kevin Brooks
Cognitive suppression of tilt sensations during linear horizontal self-motion in the dark 733 – 741
Alex H Wertheim, Barbara S Mesland, Willem Bles
Multistability of overlapped face stimuli is dependent upon orientation 743 – 753
Isabelle Boutet, Avi Chaudhuri
Familiarisation with faces selectively enhances sensitivity to changes made to the eyes 755 – 764
Christopher O'Donnell, Vicki Bruce
People don't keep their heads still when looking to one side, and other people can tell 765 – 767
Martin J Doherty, James R Anderson
The Lady's not for turning: Rotation of the Thatcher illusion 769 – 774
Michael B Lewis
Reviews 775 – 776
Earle on Parks (Ed.): Looking at looking: An introduction to the intelligence of vision
Guest editorial
Footsteps and inchworms: Illusions show that contrast affects apparent speed 785 – 794
Stuart Anstis
Identification of visual stimuli is improved by accompanying auditory stimuli: The role of eye movements and sound location 795 – 810
Melanie C Doyle, Robert J Snowden
Is optic flow used to guide walking while wearing a displacing prism? 811 – 818
Mike G Harris, Giles Carré
The perception of texture on folded surfaces 819 – 832
Mary J Bravo, Hany Farid
Processing time of contour integration: the role of colour, contrast, and curvature? 833 – 853
William H A Beaudot, Kathy T Mullen
Visual inter-attribute contour completion 855 – 865
Leo Poom
Connectivity perception of partly occluded gratings in 4-month-old infants 867 – 874
Hideaki Kawabata, Jiro Gyoba, Hajime Inoue, Haruhiko Ohtsubo
Dynamic properties influence the perception of facial expressions 875 – 887
Miyuki Kamachi, Vicki Bruce, Shigeru Mukaida, Jiro Gyoba, Sakiko Yoshikawa, Shigeru Akamatsu
Simultaneous lightness contrast with double increments 889 – 897
Paola Bressan, Rossana Actis-Grosso
Last but not least
Reviews 901 – 902
Brown on Bolhuis (Ed.): Brain, perception, memory: Advances in cognitive neuroscience
Editorial
Beyond junctions: nonlocal form constraints on motion interpretation 905 – 923
Josh McDermott, Yair Weiss, Edward H Adelson
Recognition of point-light biological motion displays by young children 925 – 933
Marina Pavlova, Ingeborg Krägeloh-Mann, Alexander Sokolov, Niels Birbaumer
Visual mislocalisation induced by translational and radial background motion 935 – 944
Hitoshi Honda
Mental imagery of visual motion modifies the perception of roll-vection stimulation 945 – 957
Fred W Mast, Alain Berthoz, Stephen M Kosslyn
Perceptual continuation and depth in visual phantoms can be explained by perceptual transparency 959 – 968
Akiyoshi Kitaoka, Jiro Gyoba, Hideaki Kawabata, Kenzo Sakurai
Effect of photographic negation on matching the expressions and identities of faces 969 – 981
Murray White
Visuospatial attention: the role of target contrast and task difficulty when assessing the effects of cues 983 – 991
Robert J Snowden, Jennifer Willey, Janice L Muir
Characterising the visual buffer: real-world evidence for overwriting early in each fixation 993 – 1006
Benjamin W Tatler
Exploring the link between time to collision and representational momentum 1007 – 1022
Rob Gray, Ian M Thornton
Discussion 1023 – 1026
Piers D L Howe
Reviews 1027 – 1028
Kirkpatrick on Fagot (Ed.): Picture perception in animals
Editorial
Explaining lightness illusions 1031 – 1046
Paola Bressan
Multiple routes to object matching from different viewpoints: Mental rotation versus invariant features 1047 – 1056
Jan Vanrie, Bert Willems, Johan Wagemans
Surface cues reduce the latency to name rotated images of objects 1057 – 1081
Karen G Nicholson, G Keith Humphrey
Reflexive shifts of covert attention operate in an egocentric coordinate frame 1083 – 1091
Doug J K Barrett, Mark F Bradshaw, David Rose, John Everatt, Peter J Simpson
Perceptual grouping in two visually reliant species: Humans (Homo sapiens) and Australian sea lions (Neophoca cinerea) 1093 – 1106
Darren Burke, Paul Everingham, Tracey Rogers, Melinda Hinton Sophie Hall-Aspland
An 'other-race' effect in age estimation from faces 1107 – 1113
Hedwige Dehon, Serge Brédart
Categorical perception of facial expressions by 7-month-old infants 1115 – 1125
Eleni Kotsoni, Michelle de Haan, Mark H Johnson
The role of visual and auditory temporal processing in reading irregular and nonsense words 1127 – 1142
Agnes Au, Bill Lovegrove
Double fusion does not occur in Panum's limiting case: evidence from orientation disparity 1143 – 1149
Zhihong Wang, Xin-nian Wu, Ree Ni, Yun-jiu Wang
Last but not least
Reviews 1153 – 1154
Smith on Rapp (Ed.): The handbook of cognitive neuropsychology: What deficits reveal about the human mind
Editorial
The eye as an optical instrument: from camera obscura to Helmholtz's perspective 1157 – 1177
Nicholas J Wade, Stanley Finger
What does the Ternus display tell us about motion processing in human vision? 1179 – 1188
Nicholas E Scott-Samuel, Robert F Hess
Independent detectors for expansion and rotation, and for orthogonal components of deformation 1189 – 1202
Tim S Meese, Mike G Harris
Raised visual detection thresholds depend on the level of complexity of cognitive foveal loading 1203 – 1212
Sotiris Plainis, Ian J Murray, Kamlesh Chauhan
Of holes and wholes: The perception of surrounded regions 1213 – 1226
Rolf Nelson, Stephen E Palmer
Can attention select only a fixed number of objects at a time? 1227 – 1248
Greg Davis, Victoria L Welch, Amanda Holmes, Alex Shepherd
Mental models of line drawings 1249 – 1261
Kevin J Burns
Amplitude and spatial-period discrimination in sinusoidal gratings by dynamic touch 1263 – 1274
Harold T Nefs, Astrid M L Kappers, Jan J Koenderink
Last but not least
Reviews / Erratum 1277 – 1280
Hibbard on Zanker, Zeil (Eds): Motion vision: Computational, neural and ecological constraints
Guest editorial
Information concentration along the boundary contours of naturally shaped solid objects 1285 – 1294
J Farley Norman, Flip Phillips, Heather E Ross
The importance of being convex: An advantage for convexity when judging position 1295 – 1310
Marco Bertamini
A purely temporal transparency mechanism in the visual system 1311 – 1320
Alex O Holcombe
The directional tuning of the barber-pole illusion 1321 – 1336
Nick Fisher, Johannes M Zanker
Visual object categorisation at distinct levels of abstraction: A new stimulus set 1337 – 1361
Hans Op de Beeck, Johan Wagemans
Carryover bias in visual assessment 1363 – 1373
Steven J Ferris, Rob A Kempton, Ian J Deary, Elizabeth J Austin, Margaret V Shotter
Rapid, object-based learning in the deployment of transient attention 1375 – 1387
Árni Kristjánsson, Manfred Mackeben, Ken Nakayama
Quantifying the performance limits of human saccadic targeting during visual search 1389 – 1401
Miguel P Eckstein, Brent R Beutter, Leland S Stone
Reviews 1403 – 1405
Davis on Newcombe, Huttenlocher: Making space: the development of spatial representation and reasoning
Guest editorial
Spatial coherence does not affect contrast discrimination for multiple Gabor stimuli 1411 – 1422
Tim S Meese, Robert F Hess, Cristyn B Williams
Flank transparency: transparent filters seen in dynamic two-color displays 1423 – 1426
Daniel Wollschläger, Antonio M Rodriguez, Donald D Hoffman
The role of cognitive factors in the rod-and-frame effect 1427 – 1438
Corinne Cian, Christian Raphel, Pierre Alain Barraud
Effects of voluntary attention on structured afterimages 1439 – 1448
Liang Lou
On the use of the Ternus test to assess magnocellular function 1449 – 1457
Bernt C Skottun
Is visual search really like foraging? 1459 – 1464
Iain D Gilchrist, Alice North, Bruce Hood
Pursuit compensation during self-motion 1465 – 1488
James A Crowell, Richard A Andersen
Thirst modulates a perception 1489 – 1497
Mark A Changizi, Warren G Hall
Subject index 1509 – 1514
Author index 1515 – 1517
Referees 1518 – 1519
Perception WWW CD-ROM archive 1520