It has been shown that the probability of face repetitions influences the magnitude of repetition-related response reductions (Summerfield et al., 2008), implying that perceptual expectations affect adaptation and repetition suppression processes in the human central nervous system. An unresolved question is whether probability effects are specific for the retinal position of the stimuli or affect stimulus processing globally, throughout the visual field. To address this question we tested whether face repetition probability affects fMRI adaptation (fMRIa) when the repeated stimuli are presented on the same retinal position, overlapping each other or when they are presented in opposite hemifields. Subjects were exposed to either two identic...
Visual cortical responses are usually attenuated by repetition, a phenomenon known as repetition sup...
Stimulus repetition decreases the response of neurons in the monkey inferior temporal (IT) cortex (M...
Neural responses to stimuli are often attenuated by repeated presentation. When observed in blood ox...
Previously several functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies point toward the role of per...
Previously several functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies point toward the role of per...
I review a number of fMRI studies that investigate the effects of repeating faces on responses in th...
Repetition suppression (RS) (or functional magnetic resonance imaging adaptation) refers to the redu...
AbstractI review a number of fMRI studies that investigate the effects of repeating faces on respons...
The repetition of a given stimulus leads to the attenuation of the functional magnetic resonance ima...
Repetition suppression, which refers to reduced neural activity for repeated stimuli, is typically e...
Visual cortical responses are usually attenuated by repetition, a phenomenon known as repetition sup...
Repetition suppression (RS) (or functional magnetic resonance imaging adaptation) refers to the redu...
© 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. This is an open access article under the CC BY licens...
Visual cortical responses are usually attenuated by repetition, a phenomenon known as repetition sup...
Neural responses to stimuli are often attenuated by repeated presentation. When observed in blood ox...
Visual cortical responses are usually attenuated by repetition, a phenomenon known as repetition sup...
Stimulus repetition decreases the response of neurons in the monkey inferior temporal (IT) cortex (M...
Neural responses to stimuli are often attenuated by repeated presentation. When observed in blood ox...
Previously several functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies point toward the role of per...
Previously several functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies point toward the role of per...
I review a number of fMRI studies that investigate the effects of repeating faces on responses in th...
Repetition suppression (RS) (or functional magnetic resonance imaging adaptation) refers to the redu...
AbstractI review a number of fMRI studies that investigate the effects of repeating faces on respons...
The repetition of a given stimulus leads to the attenuation of the functional magnetic resonance ima...
Repetition suppression, which refers to reduced neural activity for repeated stimuli, is typically e...
Visual cortical responses are usually attenuated by repetition, a phenomenon known as repetition sup...
Repetition suppression (RS) (or functional magnetic resonance imaging adaptation) refers to the redu...
© 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. This is an open access article under the CC BY licens...
Visual cortical responses are usually attenuated by repetition, a phenomenon known as repetition sup...
Neural responses to stimuli are often attenuated by repeated presentation. When observed in blood ox...
Visual cortical responses are usually attenuated by repetition, a phenomenon known as repetition sup...
Stimulus repetition decreases the response of neurons in the monkey inferior temporal (IT) cortex (M...
Neural responses to stimuli are often attenuated by repeated presentation. When observed in blood ox...