How does the brain maintain stable fusion of 3D scenes when the eyes move? Every eye movement causes each retinal position to process a different set of scenic features, and thus the brain needs to binocularly fuse new combinations of features at each position after an eye movement. Despite these breaks in retinotopic fusion due to each movement, previously fused representations of a scene in depth often appear stable. The 3D ARTSCAN neural model proposes how the brain does this by unifying concepts about how multiple cortical areas in the What and Where cortical streams interact to coordinate processes of 3D boundary and surface perception, spatial attention, invariant object category learning, predictive remapping, eye movement control, a...
The selection of fixation targets involves a combination of top-down and bottom-up processing. The r...
To explore visual scenes in the everyday world, we constantly move our eyes, yet most neural studies...
Our eyes are constantly moving yet our perception remains stable. Neurons in lateral intraparietal c...
How does the visual cortex learn invariant object categories as an observer scans a depthful scene?...
Binocular fusion and invariant category learning due to predictive remapping during scanning of a de...
Neurophysiological evidence for invariant representations of objects and faces in the primate inferi...
AbstractThis article further develops the FACADE neural model of 3-D vision and figure-ground percep...
The understanding of the subjective experience of a visually stable world despite the occurrence of ...
As we look around a scene, we perceive it as continuous and stable even though each saccadic eye mov...
As we look around a scene, we perceive it as continuous and stable even though each saccadic eye mov...
In order to navigate and interact within their environment, animals must process and interpret senso...
Under natural viewing conditions, a single depthful percept of the world is consciously seen. When d...
Humans actively explore their visual environment by moving their eyes. Precise coordination of the e...
To reconstruct the third dimension from flat retinal images, the brain exploits a range of monocular...
The inferior temporal cortex (IT) of monkeys is thought to play an essential role in visual object...
The selection of fixation targets involves a combination of top-down and bottom-up processing. The r...
To explore visual scenes in the everyday world, we constantly move our eyes, yet most neural studies...
Our eyes are constantly moving yet our perception remains stable. Neurons in lateral intraparietal c...
How does the visual cortex learn invariant object categories as an observer scans a depthful scene?...
Binocular fusion and invariant category learning due to predictive remapping during scanning of a de...
Neurophysiological evidence for invariant representations of objects and faces in the primate inferi...
AbstractThis article further develops the FACADE neural model of 3-D vision and figure-ground percep...
The understanding of the subjective experience of a visually stable world despite the occurrence of ...
As we look around a scene, we perceive it as continuous and stable even though each saccadic eye mov...
As we look around a scene, we perceive it as continuous and stable even though each saccadic eye mov...
In order to navigate and interact within their environment, animals must process and interpret senso...
Under natural viewing conditions, a single depthful percept of the world is consciously seen. When d...
Humans actively explore their visual environment by moving their eyes. Precise coordination of the e...
To reconstruct the third dimension from flat retinal images, the brain exploits a range of monocular...
The inferior temporal cortex (IT) of monkeys is thought to play an essential role in visual object...
The selection of fixation targets involves a combination of top-down and bottom-up processing. The r...
To explore visual scenes in the everyday world, we constantly move our eyes, yet most neural studies...
Our eyes are constantly moving yet our perception remains stable. Neurons in lateral intraparietal c...