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Visual Imagery and Perception Share Neural Representations in the Alpha Frequency Band.
Xie S, Kaiser D, Cichy RM.
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Where's Wanda? The influence of visual imagery vividness on visual search speed measured by means of hidden object pictures. [PDF]
Monzel M, Reuter M.
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Decoding Images in the Mind's Eye: The Temporal Dynamics of Visual Imagery. [PDF]
Shatek SM +3 more
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WIREs Cognitive Science, 2010
AbstractVisual mental imagery is our ability to reactivate and manipulate visual representations in the absence of the corresponding visual stimuli, giving rise to the experience of ‘seeing with the mind's eye’. Until relatively recently, visual mental imagery had been investigated by philosophy and cognitive psychology.
Giorgio, Ganis, Haline E, Schendan
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AbstractVisual mental imagery is our ability to reactivate and manipulate visual representations in the absence of the corresponding visual stimuli, giving rise to the experience of ‘seeing with the mind's eye’. Until relatively recently, visual mental imagery had been investigated by philosophy and cognitive psychology.
Giorgio, Ganis, Haline E, Schendan
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Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1973
Movement of the hand in total darkness by 7 sighted Ss gave rise to a sense of motion visually. This phenomenon was called kinetic visual imagery. The kinetic imagery was followed by the impression of being able to see the hand. The phenomenal visualization of the hand was clearly distinguished from the images of imagination, memory, and hallucination.
L, Brosgole, A, Neylon
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Movement of the hand in total darkness by 7 sighted Ss gave rise to a sense of motion visually. This phenomenon was called kinetic visual imagery. The kinetic imagery was followed by the impression of being able to see the hand. The phenomenal visualization of the hand was clearly distinguished from the images of imagination, memory, and hallucination.
L, Brosgole, A, Neylon
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Visual imagery and visual representation
Trends in Neurosciences, 1994Among many controversies in visual neuroscience is whether visual imagery of objects, scenes and living beings is based upon contributions of the early visual areas or depends on hierarchical higher visual areas only, and whether the cortical areas subserving visual imagery are identical to those underlying visual perception.
P E, Roland, B, Gulyás
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British Journal of Psychology, 1969
Undergraduate subjects processed the alphabet in one of three conditions: Visual Imagery (VI), in which subjects were instructed to visualize letters appearing one at a time, as on a movie screen; Speech Imagery (SI) in which subjects were instructed to say letters implicitly or silently; and a control condition Speech Explicit (SE) in which letters ...
WEBER, ROBERT J., Bach, Michael
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Undergraduate subjects processed the alphabet in one of three conditions: Visual Imagery (VI), in which subjects were instructed to visualize letters appearing one at a time, as on a movie screen; Speech Imagery (SI) in which subjects were instructed to say letters implicitly or silently; and a control condition Speech Explicit (SE) in which letters ...
WEBER, ROBERT J., Bach, Michael
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