Results 321 to 330 of about 457,293 (369)
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The responsiveness of Clare-Bishop neurons to motion cues for motion stereopsis

Neuroscience Research, 1986
Under paralysis of eye movement and optical adjustment of visual axes of the two eyes, neuronal responsiveness in cat Clare-Bishop (CB) cortex to the binocular presentation of visual stimuli was studied using two types of visual stimulator which presented: 3-dimensional motion of a visual stimulus; and the motion cues (movement of retinal images in the
K, Toyama, Y, Komatsu, T, Kozasa
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Driven response of the synchrotron motion of a beam

Physical Review Letters, 1993
The synchroton motion of a beam was tracked for the first time by digitizing the phase of the beam signal from a high bandwidth wall gap monitor relative to the rf phase and the momentum deviation with a transverse beam position measurement in a high dispersion region. The measured synchrotron tune as a function of the synchrotron amplitude agrees well
, Ellison   +29 more
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The Optomotor Response and Induced Motion of the Self

Perception, 1986
Although the optomotor response in animals and induced motion of the self in humans occur under very similar stimulus conditions, they have not hitherto been related. Experiments with fish are reported which support the hypothesis that the optomotor response is based on the animal's attempt to nullify the unwanted experience of its own motion that is ...
I, Rock, D, Smith
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Site Response to Vertical Earthquake Motion

Geotechnical Earthquake Engineering and Soil Dynamics IV, 2008
Evaluation of ground response is one of the fundamental problems in earthquake geotechnical engineering. Current practice has tended to focus on horizontal earthquake motion and ignore the effect of vertical motion. Because of strong vertical ground motions recorded in recent earthquakes, great concern has arisen over the behavior of vertical motion ...
Yang, J, Yan, XR
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Responsive Motion Generation

2015
In this chapter, we discuss the generation of natural behaviors of humanoids (virtual human characters in particular) responsive to the physical interaction with the user such as push and pull. These physical interactions play an important role for increasing the level of immersion of the user and lay foundations for more advanced level of interactions.
Sukwon Lee, Sung-Hee Lee
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Responsive characters from motion fragments

ACM Transactions on Graphics, 2007
In game environments, animated character motion must rapidly adapt to changes in player input - for example, if a directional signal from the player's gamepad is not incorporated into the character's trajectory immediately, the character may blithely run off a ledge.
McCann, James, Pollard, Nancy S.
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Galvanic Skin Responses to Motion Pictures

Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1970
Number and amplitude of galvanic skin responses (GSRs) during rest, during a bland and during a stressor film were examined in 20 male student Ss. The Zuckerman Multiple Affect Adjective Check List (MAACL) was administered before and after both stressor and bland films.
C, Kaiser, R, Roessler
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Reproducing the Flow Response to Actuator Motion

Journal of Computational Physics, 1998
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
Hofmann, Lorenz M., Herbert, Thorwald
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Temporal integration of sound motion: Motion-onset response and perception

Hearing Research
The purpose of our study was to estimate the time interval required for integrating the acoustical changes related to sound motion using both psychophysical and EEG measures. Healthy listeners performed direction identification tasks under dichotic conditions in the delayed-motion paradigm.
Lidia B, Shestopalova   +3 more
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Motion-responsive regions of the human brain

Experimental Brain Research, 1999
Functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to map motion responsive regions of the human brain by contrasting passive viewing of moving and stationary randomly textured patterns. Regions were retained as motion responsive if they reached significance either in the group analysis or in the majority of hemispheres in single-subject analysis.
S, Sunaert   +3 more
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