Two phases of V1 activity for visual recognition of natural images.
about
Early recurrent feedback facilitates visual object recognition under challenging conditionsTranscranial magnetic stimulation for investigating causal brain-behavioral relationships and their time course.The temporal dynamics of early visual cortex involvement in behavioral priming.Neural processing stages during object-substitution masking and their relationship to perceptual awareness.Behavior in oblivion: the neurobiology of subliminal primingRecurrent activity in higher order, modality non-specific brain regions: a Granger causality analysis of autobiographic memory retrieval.A chronometric exploration of high-resolution 'sensitive TMS masking' effects on subjective and objective measures of vision.Stochastic process underlying emergent recognition of visual objects hidden in degraded imagesDisruption of visual awareness during the attentional blink is reflected by selective disruption of late-stage neural processing.Dense sampling reveals behavioral oscillations in rapid visual categorization.Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) inhibits cortical dendrites.Spatiotemporal dynamics in understanding hand-object interactionsProbing feedforward and feedback contributions to awareness with visual masking and transcranial magnetic stimulation.Spatially specific vs. unspecific disruption of visual orientation perception using chronometric pre-stimulus TMS.Recurrent processing enhances visual awareness but is not necessary for fast categorization of natural scenes.Unconscious response priming by shape depends on geniculostriate visual projection.TMS to the lateral occipital cortex disrupts object processing but facilitates scene processing.The time course of visual letter perception.Perceptual Discrimination of Basic Object Features Is Not Facilitated When Priming Stimuli Are Prevented From Reaching Awareness by Means of Visual Masking.Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation to the Occipital Place Area Biases Gaze During Scene Viewing.Ultra-Rapid serial visual presentation reveals dynamics of feedforward and feedback processes in the ventral visual pathway.
P2860
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P2860
Two phases of V1 activity for visual recognition of natural images.
description
2010 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2010年の論文
@ja
2010年学术文章
@wuu
2010年学术文章
@zh-cn
2010年学术文章
@zh-hans
2010年学术文章
@zh-my
2010年学术文章
@zh-sg
2010年學術文章
@yue
2010年學術文章
@zh
2010年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
Two phases of V1 activity for visual recognition of natural images.
@ast
Two phases of V1 activity for visual recognition of natural images.
@en
type
label
Two phases of V1 activity for visual recognition of natural images.
@ast
Two phases of V1 activity for visual recognition of natural images.
@en
prefLabel
Two phases of V1 activity for visual recognition of natural images.
@ast
Two phases of V1 activity for visual recognition of natural images.
@en
P2093
P2860
P356
P1476
Two phases of V1 activity for visual recognition of natural images.
@en
P2093
Ehud Zohary
Joan A Camprodon
Verena Brodbeck
P2860
P304
P356
10.1162/JOCN.2009.21253
P577
2010-06-01T00:00:00Z