Center for Mind and Brain

Sections
Navigation
UC Davis Center for Mind and Brain

267 Cousteau Place
Davis, CA 95618

(530) 297-4651 phone
(530) 297-4400 fax

 
Personal tools

Publications

This folder holds the following references to publications, sorted by year and author:

Whitney, D (2004).
Integrating Basic and Applied Vision Research
Contemporary Psychology; PsyCritiques.

Whitney, D and Cavanagh, P (2003).
Motion adaptation shifts apparent position without the motion aftereffect.
Percept Psychophys 65(7):1011-8.

Whitney, D, Goltz, HC, Thomas, CG, Gati, JS, Menon, RS, and Goodale, MA (2003).
Flexible retinotopy: motion-dependent position coding in the visual cortex.
Science 302(5646):878-81.

Whitney, D, Westwood, DA, and Goodale, MA (2003).
The influence of visual motion on fast reaching movements to a stationary object.
Nature 423(6942):869-73.

Whitney, D (2002).
The influence of visual motion on perceived position.
Trends Cogn Sci 6(5):211-216.

Whitney, D and Cavanagh, P (2002).
Surrounding motion affects the perceived locations of moving stimuli.
Visual Cognition 9:139-152.

Whitney, D and Cavanagh, P (2000).
The position of moving objects.
Science 289(5482):1107.

Whitney, D and Cavanagh, P (2000).
Motion distorts visual space: shifting the perceived position of remote stationary objects.
Nature Neuroscience 3(9):954-959.

Whitney, D, Cavanagh, P, and Murakami, I (2000).
Temporal facilitation for moving stimuli is independent of changes in direction.
Vision Res 40(28):3829-39.

Whitney, D, Murakami, I, and Cavanagh, P (2000).
Illusory spatial offset of a flash relative to a moving stimulus is caused by differential latencies for moving and flashed stimuli.
Vision Res 40(2):137-49.

Whitney, D and Murakami, I (1998).
Latency difference, not spatial extrapolation.
Nature Neuroscience 1(8):656-657.

Farzin, F and Rivera, S ().

.