386 results found
    1. Neuroscience

    The lawful imprecision of human surface tilt estimation in natural scenes

    Seha Kim, Johannes Burge
    Human tilt estimation in natural scenes is predicted by an image-computable Bayes optimal model that is grounded in the statistics of natural images and scenes.
    1. Neuroscience

    Object representation in a gravitational reference frame

    Alexandriya MX Emonds, Ramanujan Srinath ... Charles E Connor
    Neural recordings in monkey IT show that the primate visual system transforms object representations into a reference frame aligned with gravity and independent of how the head and eyes are tilted.
    1. Neuroscience

    Augmented reality powers a cognitive assistant for the blind

    Yang Liu, Noelle RB Stiles, Markus Meister
    A non-invasive cognitive assistant for blind people endows objects in the environment with voices, allowing users to explore the scene, localize objects, and navigate through a building with minimal training.
    1. Neuroscience

    A neural mechanism for contextualizing fragmented inputs during naturalistic vision

    Daniel Kaiser, Jacopo Turini, Radoslaw M Cichy
    In scene-selective occipital cortex and within 200 ms of processing, visual inputs are sorted according to their typical spatial position within a scene.
    1. Computational and Systems Biology
    2. Ecology

    Place recognition using batlike sonar

    Dieter Vanderelst, Jan Steckel ... Marc W Holderied
    Echolocating bats may recognize locations in the environment (and navigate to them) by remembering the specific echo signature of those locations.
    1. Neuroscience

    Visual pursuit behavior in mice maintains the pursued prey on the retinal region with least optic flow

    Carl D Holmgren, Paul Stahr ... Jason ND Kerr
    Digital reconstruction of environment combined with eye and head-tracking enabled the process of prey-detection and capture to be seen from the freely moving mouse’s point-of-view and shows the exact visual-field and retinal location mice use when chasing prey and the advantage.
    1. Neuroscience

    Image content is more important than Bouma’s Law for scene metamers

    Thomas SA Wallis, Christina M Funke ... Matthias Bethge
    Peripheral appearance models emphasising pooling processes that depend on retinal eccentricity will instead need to explore input-dependent grouping and segmentation.
    1. Neuroscience

    Visual attention is available at a task-relevant location rapidly after a saccade

    Tao Yao, Madhura Ketkar ... B Suresh Krishna
    Spatial attention and saccadic processing co-ordinate to ensure that attention is available at a task-relevant location soon after the beginning of each eye fixation.
    1. Neuroscience

    A double dissociation between semantic and spatial cognition in visual to default network pathways

    Tirso RJ Gonzalez Alam, Katya Krieger-Redwood ... Elizabeth Jefferies
    Default mode network and visual cortex are connected via two parallel pathways that differentially respond to the processing of visual scenes and semantic information about objects, reflecting domain-specific organisation.
    1. Neuroscience

    Cross-species cortical alignment identifies different types of anatomical reorganization in the primate temporal lobe

    Nicole Eichert, Emma C Robinson ... Rogier B Mars
    Cross-species alignment based on cortical myelin content can dissociate cortical expansion and relocation from changes in connectivity profiles in the temporal lobe of higher primates.

Refine your results by:

Type
Research categories