about
Retinotopic activity in V1 reflects the perceived and not the retinal size of an afterimageSize Constancy is Preserved but Afterimages are Prolonged in Typical Individuals with Higher Degrees of Self-Reported Autistic Traits.Vision Research Literature May Not Represent the Full Intellectual Range of Autism Spectrum DisorderThe primary motor and premotor areas of the human cerebral cortex.Category-specific neural processing for naming pictures of animals and naming pictures of tools: an ALE meta-analysis.The lateral-occipital and the inferior-frontal cortex play different roles during the naming of visually presented objects.Repetition suppression in occipital-temporal visual areas is modulated by physical rather than semantic features of objects.The Mechanisms of Size Constancy.Why do animals differ in their susceptibility to geometrical illusions?Global processing during the Müller-Lyer illusion is distinctively affected by the degree of autistic traits in the typical population.Rapid decrement in the effects of the Ponzo display dissociates action and perception.Susceptibility to Optical Illusions Varies as a Function of the Autism-Spectrum Quotient but not in Ways Predicted by Local-Global Biases.Eye-Tracking Reveals that the Strength of the Vertical-Horizontal Illusion Increases as the Retinal Image Becomes More Stable with Fixation.Size Aftereffects Are Eliminated When Adaptor Stimuli Are Prevented from Reaching Awareness by Continuous Flash Suppression.Perceived size change induced by nonvisual signals in darkness: the relative contribution of vergence and proprioception.FMRI-adaptation to highly-rendered color photographs of animals and manipulable artifacts during a classification task.Visual perception in domestic dogs: susceptibility to the Ebbinghaus-Titchener and Delboeuf illusions.Relational concept learning in domestic dogs: Performance on a two-choice size discrimination task generalises to novel stimuli.Is the primary visual cortex a center stage for the visual phenomenology of object size?Dissociable neural mechanisms for determining the perceived heaviness of objects and the predicted weight of objects during lifting: an fMRI investigation of the size-weight illusion.What do dogs (Canis familiaris) see? A review of vision in dogs and implications for cognition research.Visual-motor association learning in undergraduate students as a function of the autism-spectrum quotient.Programs for action in superior parietal cortex: a triple-pulse TMS investigation.Functional reorganization in the adult brain.Modulating neural networks with transcranial magnetic stimulation applied over the dorsal premotor and primary motor cortices.A TMS Investigation on the Role of Lateral Occipital Complex and Caudal Intraparietal Sulcus in the Perception of Object Form and Orientation.Overlapping neural circuits for visual attention and eye movements in the human cerebellum.Retinotopic organization of the visual cortex before and after decompression of the optic chiasm in a patient with pituitary macroadenoma.Different roles of PMv and PMd during object lifting.Sensitivity to biomechanical limitations during postural decision-making depends on the integrity of posterior superior parietal cortex.Functional MRI study of the primary somatosensory cortex in comatose survivors of cardiac arrest.Mechanisms of action underlying the effect of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation on mood: behavioral and brain imaging studies.Role of the primary motor and dorsal premotor cortices in the anticipation of forces during object lifting.Perceptual Discrimination of Basic Object Features Is Not Facilitated When Priming Stimuli Are Prevented From Reaching Awareness by Means of Visual Masking.The Shepard Illusion Is Reduced in Children With an Autism Spectrum Disorder Because of Perceptual Rather Than Attentional MechanismsBarbie-Cueing Weight Perception.Attractive Contours of the Ebbinghaus IllusionLow-level sensory processes play a more crucial role than high-level cognitive ones in the size-weight illusionAutism Traits, Sensory Over-Responsivity, Anxiety, and Stress: A Test of Explanatory ModelsPerceptual size discrimination requires awareness and late visual areas: A continuous flash suppression and interocular transfer study
P50
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P50
description
researcher
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wetenschapper
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հետազոտող
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name
Philippe A. Chouinard
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Philippe A. Chouinard
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Philippe A. Chouinard
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Philippe A. Chouinard
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Philippe A. Chouinard
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Philippe A. Chouinard
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Philippe A. Chouinard
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Philippe A. Chouinard
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Philippe A. Chouinard
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Philippe A. Chouinard
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Philippe A. Chouinard
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Philippe A. Chouinard
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Philippe A. Chouinard
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Philippe A. Chouinard
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Philippe A. Chouinard
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P106
P1153
36875071600
P2456
P31
P496
0000-0001-9817-0689