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Binocular versus standard occlusion or blurring treatment for unilateral amblyopia in children aged three to eight yearsBinocular versus standard occlusion or blurring treatment for unilateral amblyopia in children aged three to eight yearsVariations in crowding, saccadic precision, and spatial localization reveal the shared topology of spatial visionA common visual metric for approximate number and density.The neural correlates of crowding-induced changes in appearance.Childhood amblyopia: current management and new trends.Cortical idiosyncrasies predict the perception of object sizePositional averaging explains crowding with letter-like stimuli.The orientation selectivity of face identification.Foveal target repetitions reduce crowding.Crowding follows the binding of relative position and orientation.Crowding is tuned for perceived (not physical) location.Number and density discrimination rely on a common metric: Similar psychophysical effects of size, contrast, and divided attention.Binocular Therapy for Childhood Amblyopia Improves Vision Without Breaking Interocular Suppression.Categorical information influences conscious perception: An interaction between object-substitution masking and repetition blindness.Crowding for faces is determined by visual (not holistic) similarity: Evidence from judgements of eye positionAn oblique effect for transparent-motion detection caused by variation in global-motion direction-tuning bandwidthsTuning properties of radial phantom motion aftereffectsAn extension of the transparent-motion detection limit using speed-tuned global-motion systemsThe perception of motion transparency: a signal-to-noise limitPushing the limits of transparent-motion detection with binocular disparityThe detection of multiple global directions: capacity limits with spatially segregated and transparent-motion signalsProbabilistic, positional averaging predicts object-level crowding effects with letter-like stimuliVisual acuity, crowding, and stereo-vision are linked in children with and without amblyopiaCrowding is reduced by onset transients in the target object (but not in the flankers)Dissociable effects of visual crowding on the perception of color and motionPopulation receptive field estimates for motion-defined stimuli
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description
researcher
@en
wetenschapper
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հետազոտող
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name
John A Greenwood
@ast
John A Greenwood
@en
John A Greenwood
@es
John A Greenwood
@nl
type
label
John A Greenwood
@ast
John A Greenwood
@en
John A Greenwood
@es
John A Greenwood
@nl
prefLabel
John A Greenwood
@ast
John A Greenwood
@en
John A Greenwood
@es
John A Greenwood
@nl
P106
P1153
55658057130
P31
P496
0000-0002-6184-0818