Stephen T. Hammett, PhD

Affiliations: 
Psychology Royal Holloway University of London, Egham, England, United Kingdom 
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"Stephen Hammett"
Mean distance: 18.59 (cluster 23)
 
Cross-listing: PsychTree

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Publications

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Hassan O, Georgeson MA, Hammett ST. (2018) Brightening and Dimming Aftereffects at Low and High Luminance. Vision (Basel, Switzerland). 2
Hammett ST, Smith AT, Wall MB, et al. (2013) Implicit representations of luminance and the temporal structure of moving stimuli in multiple regions of human visual cortex revealed by multivariate pattern classification analysis. Journal of Neurophysiology. 110: 688-99
Hammett ST, Larsson J. (2012) The effect of contrast on perceived speed and flicker. Journal of Vision. 12: 17
Champion RA, Hammett ST, Thompson PG. (2007) Perceived direction of plaid motion is not predicted by component speeds. Vision Research. 47: 375-83
Thompson P, Brooks K, Hammett ST. (2006) Speed can go up as well as down at low contrast: implications for models of motion perception. Vision Research. 46: 782-6
Hammett ST, Champion RA, Morland AB, et al. (2005) A ratio model of perceived speed in the human visual system. Proceedings. Biological Sciences / the Royal Society. 272: 2351-6
Hammett ST, Georgeson MA, Barbieri-Hesse GS. (2003) Motion, flash, and flicker: a unified spatiotemporal model of perceived edge sharpening. Perception. 32: 1221-32
Hammett ST, Georgeson MA, Bedingham S, et al. (2003) Motion sharpening and contrast: gain control precedes compressive non-linearity? Vision Research. 43: 1187-99
Georgeson MA, Hammett ST. (2002) Seeing blur: 'motion sharpening' without motion. Proceedings. Biological Sciences / the Royal Society. 269: 1429-34
Hammett ST, Thompson PG, Bedingham S. (2000) The dynamics of velocity adaptation in human vision. Current Biology : Cb. 10: 1123-6
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