Stuart A. Wallis

Affiliations: 
School of Life & Health Sciences Aston University, Birmingham, England, United Kingdom 
Area:
Spatial vision, edge detection, binocular vision
Google:
"Stuart Wallis"
Mean distance: 18.54 (cluster 23)
 
SNBCP
BETA: Related publications

Publications

You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect.

Georgeson M, Wallis S, Meese T, et al. (2016) Contrast and Lustre: a model that accounts for eleven different forms of contrast discrimination in binocular vision. Vision Research
Georgeson MA, Wallis SA. (2014) Binocular fusion, suppression and diplopia for blurred edges. Ophthalmic & Physiological Optics : the Journal of the British College of Ophthalmic Opticians (Optometrists). 34: 163-85
Wallis SA, Baker DH, Meese TS, et al. (2013) The slope of the psychometric function and non-stationarity of thresholds in spatiotemporal contrast vision. Vision Research. 76: 1-10
Wallis SA, Georgeson MA. (2012) Mach bands and multiscale models of spatial vision: the role of first, second, and third derivative operators in encoding bars and edges. Journal of Vision. 12: 18
Baker DH, Wallis SA, Georgeson MA, et al. (2012) The effect of interocular phase difference on perceived contrast. Plos One. 7: e34696
Baker DH, Wallis SA, Georgeson MA, et al. (2012) Nonlinearities in the binocular combination of luminance and contrast. Vision Research. 56: 1-9
Wallis S, Georgeson M. (2012) What is binocular fusion? Multiplicative combination of luminance gradients via the geometric mean F1000research. 12: 47-47
Georgeson M, Wallis S. (2012) Mach bands and models of spatial vision: the role of 1st, 2nd and 3rd derivative operators in encoding edges and bars Journal of Vision. 12: 319-319
Wallis S, Georgeson M. (2012) Binocular fusion, suppression and diplopia: effects of disparity, contrast polarity and contrast imbalance Perception. 41: 16-16
Wallis S, Georgeson M. (2012) What is Binocular Fusion? I-Perception. 3: 220-220
See more...