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  1. Article

    Size perception by vision and kinesthesia

    When two sizes, one perceived by vision and the other by kinesthesia, are apparently equal, the physical relationship between them varies: The sizes may be equal, or the visual size may be larger than the kine...

    Tatjana Seizova-Cajić in Perception & Psychophysics (1998)

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    Article

    Eye movements cannot explain vibration-induced visual motion and motion aftereffect

    Eye movements are thought to account for a number of visual motion illusions involving stationary objects presented against a featureless background or apparent motion of the whole visual field. We tested two ...

    Tatjana Seizova-Cajic, W. L. Ben Sachtler, Ian S. Curthoys in Experimental Brain Research (2006)

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    Article

    Adaptation of a bimodal integration stage: visual input needed during neck muscle vibration to elicit a motion aftereffect

    Vibratory stimulation of the neck muscles can elicit illusory drift of a visual target; after vibration stops, motion in the opposite direction is perceived. This motion aftereffect (MAE) could be due to adapt...

    Tatjana Seizova-Cajic, W. L. Ben Sachtler in Experimental Brain Research (2007)

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    Article

    Perception of movement extent depends on the extent of previous movements

    We report an aftereffect in perception of the extent (or degree or range) of joint movement, showing for the first time that a prolonged exposure to a passive back-and-forth movement of a certain extent result...

    Tatjana Seizova-Cajic, Janette L. Smith, Janet L. Taylor in Experimental Brain Research (2009)

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    Article

    A visual distracter task during adaptation reduces the proprioceptive movement aftereffect

    Visual processing of basic perceptual attributes depends on attention. This has been well documented since the surprising initial report on attentional modulation of the visual motion aftereffect (Chaudhuri 1990)...

    Tatjana Seizova-Cajic, Rita Azzi in Experimental Brain Research (2010)

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    Article

    Conflict with vision diminishes proprioceptive adaptation to muscle vibration

    Muscle vibration excites muscle spindles and creates illusory movement of a body part in a blindfolded individual. It is followed by an aftereffect, an illusion of return movement when vibration stops. The aft...

    Tatjana Seizova-Cajic, Rita Azzi in Experimental Brain Research (2011)

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    Chapter and Conference Paper

    Lateral Skin Stretch Influences Direction Judgments of Motion Across the Skin

    Background: Sliding of surfaces across the skin changes the position of edges and texture elements relative to the receptive fields of somatosensory neurons. This ‘successive positions’ cue is ...

    Tatjana Seizova-Cajic, Kornelia Karlsson in Haptics: Neuroscience, Devices, Modeling, … (2014)

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    Chapter and Conference Paper

    Adaptation to Motion Presented with a Tactile Array

    We investigated the effects of adaptation to 2 min of tactile apparent motion along the proximo-distal axis of the finger pad, produced with a vibrotactile array (Optacon), and developed a novel method to reve...

    Sarah McIntyre, Tatjana Seizova-Cajic in Haptics: Neuroscience, Devices, Modeling, … (2014)

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    Protocol

    Creating Tactile Motion

    Interactions with the world and between our own body parts often result in motion across the skin, and sensory processing of this motion is of interest to both basic and applied researchers. We describe motion...

    Tatjana Seizova-Cajić, Xaver Fuchs, Jack Brooks in Somatosensory Research Methods (2023)

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    Protocol

    Somatosensory Illusions

    Illusions arouse interest in the layperson and researcher alike. The layperson learns that perception is fallible, and the researcher wants to better understand mechanisms of perception and implement illusions...

    Tatjana Seizova-Cajić, Regine Zopf, Martin Riemer in Somatosensory Research Methods (2023)