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Shinji Nakamura
Shinji Nakamura
Nihon Fukushi University
Verified email at n-fukushi.ac.jp
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Cited by
Cited by
Year
The Oculus Rift: a cost-effective tool for studying visual-vestibular interactions in self-motion perception
J Kim, CYL Chung, S Nakamura, S Palmisano, SK Khuu
Frontiers in psychology 6, 127490, 2015
932015
Critical role of foreground stimuli in perceiving visually induced self-motion (vection)
S Nakamura, S Shimojo
Perception 28 (7), 893-902, 1999
911999
Additional oscillation can facilitate visually induced self-motion perception: The effects of its coherence and amplitude gradient
S Nakamura
Perception 39 (3), 320-329, 2010
532010
Stimulus size and eccentricity in visually induced perception of horizontally translational self-motion
S Nakamura, S Shimojo
Perceptual and motor skills 87 (2), 659-663, 1998
491998
Assimilation and contrast in optical illusions1
T Goto, I Uchiyama, A Imai, S Takahashi, T Hanari, S Nakamura, H Kobari
Japanese Psychological Research 49 (1), 33-44, 2007
452007
A slowly moving foreground can capture an observer’s self-motion—a report of a new motion illusion: inverted vection
S Nakamura, S Shimojo
Vision Research 40 (21), 2915-2923, 2000
362000
Walking without optic flow reduces subsequent vection
T Seno, S Palmisano, BE Riecke, S Nakamura
Experimental brain research 233, 275-281, 2015
272015
Effects of depth, eccentricity and size of additional static stimulus on visually induced self-motion perception
S Nakamura
Vision Research 46 (15), 2344-2353, 2006
272006
Effects of stimulus eccentricity on vection reevaluated with a binocularly defined depth1
S Nakamura
Japanese Psychological Research 50 (2), 77-86, 2008
232008
Effects of additional visual oscillation on vection under voluntary eye movement conditions—retinal image motion is critical in vection facilitation
S Nakamura
Perception 42 (5), 529-536, 2013
202013
Orientation of selective effects of body tilt on visually induced perception of self-motion
S Nakamura, S Shimojo
Perceptual and motor skills 87 (2), 667-672, 1998
201998
Temporonasal motion projected on the nasal retina underlies expansion–contraction asymmetry in vection
T Seno, H Ito, S Sunaga, S Nakamura
Vision Research 50 (12), 1131-1139, 2010
192010
Evidence against an ecological explanation of the jitter advantage for vection
S Palmisano, RS Allison, A Ash, S Nakamura, D Apthorp
Frontiers in Psychology 5, 109198, 2014
172014
Static visual components without depth modulation alter the strength of vection
T Seno, S Nakamura, H Ito, S Sunaga
Vision Research 50 (19), 1972-1981, 2010
172010
Coherent modulation of stimulus colour can affect visually induced self-motion perception
S Nakamura, T Seno, H Ito, S Sunaga
Perception 39 (12), 1579-1590, 2010
162010
The perception of self‐motion induced by central and peripheral visual stimuli moving in opposite directions
S Nakamura
Japanese Psychological Research 43 (3), 113-120, 2001
162001
Alcohol consumption enhances vection
T Seno, S Nakamura
Perception 42 (5), 580-582, 2013
152013
Sustained deviation of gaze direction can affect “inverted vection” induced by the foreground motion
S Nakamura, S Shimojo
Vision Research 43 (7), 745-749, 2003
152003
Depth separation between foreground and background on visually induced perception of self-motion
S Nakamura
Perceptual and motor skills 102 (3), 871-877, 2006
132006
Relative visual oscillation can facilitate visually induced self-motion perception
S Nakamura, S Palmisano, J Kim
i-Perception 7 (4), 2041669516661903, 2016
112016
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