AbstractVisual object recognition is classically believed to involve two stages: a perception stage in which perceptual information is integrated, and a memory stage in which perceptual information is matched with an object's representation. The transition from the perception to the memory stage can be slowed to allow for neuroanatomical segregation using a degraded visual stimuli (DVS) task in which images are first presented at low spatial resolution and then gradually sharpened. In this functional magnetic resonance imaging study, we characterized these two stages using a DVS task based on the classic model. To separate periods that are assumed to dominate the perception, memory, and post-recognition stages, subjects responded once when ...
Decision making can be conceptualized as the culmination of an integrative process in which evidence...
Sensory information in the retinal image is typically too ambiguous to support visual object recogni...
However confident we feel about the way we perceive the visual world around us, there is not a one-t...
AbstractVisual object recognition is classically believed to involve two stages: a perception stage ...
In our daily lives, recognizing a familiar object is an effortless and seemingly instantaneous proce...
Face recognition is critical to the appreciation of our social and physical relations. Functional ma...
AbstractThe cortical mechanisms associated with conscious object recognition were studied using func...
Decision making can be conceptualized as the culmination of an integrative process in which evidence...
Prior knowledge regarding the possible identity of an object facilitates its recognition from a degr...
Several studies suggest different functional roles for the medial and the lateral sections of the ve...
Feedforward visual object perception recruits a cortical network that is assumed to be hierarchical,...
International audienceThrough study of clinical cases with brain lesions as well as neuroimaging stu...
Several studies suggest different functional roles for the medial and the lateral sections of the ve...
Abstract: Functional magnetic resonance imaging was used in combined functional selectivity and reti...
Object perception involves a range of visual and cognitive processes, and is known to include both a...
Decision making can be conceptualized as the culmination of an integrative process in which evidence...
Sensory information in the retinal image is typically too ambiguous to support visual object recogni...
However confident we feel about the way we perceive the visual world around us, there is not a one-t...
AbstractVisual object recognition is classically believed to involve two stages: a perception stage ...
In our daily lives, recognizing a familiar object is an effortless and seemingly instantaneous proce...
Face recognition is critical to the appreciation of our social and physical relations. Functional ma...
AbstractThe cortical mechanisms associated with conscious object recognition were studied using func...
Decision making can be conceptualized as the culmination of an integrative process in which evidence...
Prior knowledge regarding the possible identity of an object facilitates its recognition from a degr...
Several studies suggest different functional roles for the medial and the lateral sections of the ve...
Feedforward visual object perception recruits a cortical network that is assumed to be hierarchical,...
International audienceThrough study of clinical cases with brain lesions as well as neuroimaging stu...
Several studies suggest different functional roles for the medial and the lateral sections of the ve...
Abstract: Functional magnetic resonance imaging was used in combined functional selectivity and reti...
Object perception involves a range of visual and cognitive processes, and is known to include both a...
Decision making can be conceptualized as the culmination of an integrative process in which evidence...
Sensory information in the retinal image is typically too ambiguous to support visual object recogni...
However confident we feel about the way we perceive the visual world around us, there is not a one-t...