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Academic Journals
- 1,137
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From:Neural Regeneration Research (Vol. 10, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedByline: Yan-li. Yang, Hong-xia. Deng, Gui-yang. Xing, Xiao-luan. Xia, Hai-fang. Li It is not clear whether the method used in functional brain-network related research can be applied to explore the feature binding...
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From:Ovidius University Annals, Series Physical Education and Sport/Science, Movement and Health (Vol. 10, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe purpose. Saccadic eye movements are rapidly moving of eye balls to an interesting point within the visual field. Even if the image on the fovea is suppressed by the mechanism of "saccadic suppression", the image can...
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From:Nature (Vol. 408, Issue 6809) Peer-ReviewedLooking at Edgar Rubin's famous image of a white vase on a dark background--or is it two dark faces on a white background?--we can alter our perception by directing our attention to either vase or face (Fig. 1). The...
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From:British Journal of Psychology (Vol. 91, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedGillian Rhodes [*] Many animals find extreme versions of secondary sexual characteristics attractive, and such preferences can enhance reproductive success (Andersson, 1994). We hypothesized, therefore, that extreme...
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From:British Journal of Psychology (Vol. 89, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedEvan Thompson, in his book 'Colour Vision. A Study in Cognitive Science and the Philosophy of Perception,' strives to extend theories on the philosophy and science of color. His view, however, is largely influenced by...
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From:Science (Vol. 262, Issue 5134) Peer-ReviewedRecognition of objects from their visual images is a key function of the primate brain. This recognition is not a template matching between the input image and stored images like the vision in lower animals but is a...
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From:Science (Vol. 249, Issue 4972) Peer-ReviewedExperimental evidence exists that when people are presented with a series of letters, they process the information differently, depending on whether the letters are actual words, pseudowords (sequences of letters that...
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From:Science (Vol. 245, Issue 4919) Peer-ReviewedNeuronal Correlates of Subjective Visual Perception NEURONS IN THE VISUAL CORTEX of higher mammals respond only to specific properties of visual stimuli [1]. One way to distinguish neuronal activity related to...
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From:Science (Vol. 268, Issue 5218) Peer-ReviewedResearch indicates that visual imagery activates the primary visual cortex and that visual perception and visual imagery share a common neural substrate. Recent advances in the understanding of how the brain generates,...
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From:Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience (Vol. 7, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedVisual processing has often been divided into three stages - early, intermediate, and high level vision, which roughly correspond to the sensation, perception, and cognition of the visual world. In this paper, we present...
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From:Science (Vol. 273, Issue 5278) Peer-ReviewedContrast is at least as important as luminosity in the perception of brightness by the human brain, a fact known to Renaissance painters. Now Andrew Rossi et al have discovered a neuronal source for the perception of...
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From:American Journal of Psychology (Vol. 108, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThe Delboeuf illusion consists in a change in the perceived (judged) size of one circle in the presence of another concentric circle. This illusion was presented and analyzed for the first time in 1865 and not, as stated...
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From:Human Factors (Vol. 37, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThis study examined the legibility of information presented on head-up displays (HUDs) for automotive application as a function of background scene complexity, the position of the HUD within field of view relative to the...
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From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 8, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Muriel Lobier 1 , * , Matthieu Dubois 2 , 3 , Sylviane Valdois 1 Introduction Typical children learn the basic mechanics of reading in one to two years. Reading speed, in contrast, increases continually...
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From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 8, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Tommaso Mastropasqua 1 , Massimo Turatto 1 , 2 , * Introduction One of the more remarkable properties of the human brain is plasticity, the ability of the brain to change through experience [1]. Sensory...
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From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 9, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Ying Wang, Yi Jiang * Introduction Perceiving the world in three dimensions is vital for our survival and daily activities. Without seeing depth, we would not be able to tell how far away a lion in the...
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From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 8, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Michelle L. Fowler 1 , Andrea Li 2 , * Introduction Texture markings on a 3-D surface provide potentially useful cues to the 3-D shape of the surface when the surface is viewed in a 2-D image [1]-[11]....
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From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 8, Issue 9) Peer-ReviewedIntroduction Attention is a neural mechanism for selecting relevant sensory information for further visual information processing. The neural circuits of attention are closely linked to the oculomotor system, e.g....
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From:Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience (Vol. 9, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedViewing of single words produces a cognitively complex mental state in which anticipation, emotional responses, visual perceptual analysis, and activation of orthographic representations are all occurring. Previous PET...
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From:Science (Vol. 290, Issue 5500) Peer-ReviewedMany areas of science depend on exploratory data analysis and visualization. The need to analyze large amounts of multivariate data raises the fundamental problem of dimensionality reduction: how to discover compact...