Results 51 to 60 of about 3,864 (188)
Abstract Amodal completion is the representation of those parts of the perceived object that we don’t get sensory information from. In the case of vision, it is the representation of occluded parts of the objects we see. Amodal completion is not a perceptual curiosity, it happens virtually all the time we perceive.
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Visual Discrimination Learning in the Jumping Spider Phidippus regius
Over the past decade, research in comparative psychology has increasingly focused on non-vertebrate models of cognition. Jumping spiders provide excellent models for the study of visually mediated behaviors, such as associative learning or the navigation
Massimo De Agrò +2 more
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The Warped Geometry of Visual Space Near a Line Assessed Using a Hyperacuity Displacement Task [PDF]
Badcock & Westheimer (Spatial Vision, 1(1), 3-11, 1985) showed that a thin vertical line induces nearby zones of attraction and repulsion; this study extends those results by more closely examining the horizontal and vertical extents of the repulsion ...
Ruda, Harald
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Complete mergeability and amodal completion
When image fragments are taken to correspond to the visible portions of a single occluded object, the object is said to 'amodally complete' behind the occluder. Kellman and Shipley (Kellman, P. J., & Shipley, T. F. (1991). A theory of visual interpolation in objective perception.
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Seeing the Speaker's Face Enhances Second Language Shadowing: Neural and Behavioral Evidence
Abstract This functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study investigated how facial cues influence second language (L2) shadowing among 42 Japanese learners of English. Participants completed four conditions that varied by task type (listening vs. shadowing) and visual input (face vs. mosaic).
Hyeonjeong Jeong +7 more
wiley +1 more source
AMODAL COMPLETION OF BOUNDARIES IN COLOURED SURFACES
n ...
Dadam, James +3 more
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How Visual Perception of the Inside of Things Creates the Impossible Dovetail
Here, we consider a well-known wooden puzzle known as the impossible dovetail. We argue that an intriguing form of amodal completion, dealing with spontaneous interpretations of the inside of objects is the key to understanding why people find it ...
Vebjørn Ekroll, Rob van Lier
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Separate cortical stages in amodal completion revealed by functional magnetic resonance adaptation : research article [PDF]
Background Objects in our environment are often partly occluded, yet we effortlessly perceive them as whole and complete. This phenomenon is called visual amodal completion. Psychophysical investigations suggest that the process of completion starts from
Muckli, Lars +2 more
core
Black in Impressionism and Post‐Impressionism: Art, Color Vision, and Psychophysics
Black has engendered controversy in 19th Century color theory and in Impressionist and Post‐Impresssionist painting. The neural mechanisms of blackness perception are being revealed through contemporary psychophysics. ABSTRACT From Paleolithic cave art to modern abstraction, artists have used black not merely as a neutral tone, but as a powerful ...
John S. Werner
wiley +1 more source
Electrophysiological evidence of the amodal representation of symmetry in extrastriate areas
Extrastriate visual areas are strongly activated by image symmetry. Less is known about symmetry representation at object-level rather than image-level.
Giulia Rampone +4 more
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