18 research outputs found
stat_data_for_fig_2_3_4
Spatial lag and slope data used for statistics associated with Figures 2,3 and
stat_data_for_fig_5AB
Spatial lag and slope data for statistics associated with Figure 5A and 5B
raw_data_human
Raw behavioral data collected from eight human subjects
pooled_data_humans
Behavioral response data from humans, pooled across sessions. This is computed from raw_data_human.mat file
stat_data_for_fig_5C
Spatial lag and slope data for statistics associated with Figure 5C
pooled_data_monkeys
Behavioral response data of monkeys, pooled across sessions. This is computed from raw_data_monkey.mat file
stat_data_for_fig_2_3_4
Spatial lag and slope data for statistics associated with Figures 2, 3 and 4
data_humans_single_sess
Psychometric function fit data for each sitting of behavioral testing in humans
Flash lag illusion in humans.
<p>(A) Example psychometric functions from a naïve (left panel) and a non-naïve (right panel) human subject measured at two speeds of the moving bar. Each data point shown was computed from 120 (subject AL) or 126 (subject SP) trials pooled from three to four sessions. Error bars: 95% bootstrap percentile-based plug-in estimate of confidence intervals.(B) Perceived spatial lags (left panel) and slopes (right panel) of the psychometric function measured at different speeds of the moving bar from eight human subjects. Each data point represents the relevant parameter extracted from psychometric functions fitted (as in panel A) on responses pooled across two to five sessions. Open symbols: naïve subjects; filled symbols: non-naïve subjects. Error bars as in A. Slope error bar upper limits for subject TS are cropped: values are 6.5 and 6.1 for speeds 10 and 14 °/s respectively).</p
fit_data_pooled_monkeys
Psychometric function fit data for monkeys' behavioral responses