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[[Image:LabLogoWikiAugUpdateRATIO.png]] [[Holcombe:Location|Lab and Office Location]]
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Welcome to the  wiki!
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We're curious about temporal aspects of human visual information processing - how quickly do different cortical modules and stages process information, and how are they coordinated in time? We use behavioral experiments, illustrated by the animations below, to compare speed limits for different features and the dynamics of how these features are bound into a coherent percept. One coordination problem occurs because when an object moves across the visual field, it stimulates different populations of neurons in early visual cortex, so we're testing how the signals from different areas are combined by later stages of the brain. Overall, fast processes somehow work together with others that are very sluggish in order to yield conscious perception. Recently, we've begun experiments to see how these limitations constrain our attempts to interact with moving objects.
We're curious about temporal aspects of human visual processing - how quickly do different cortical modules and stages process information, and how are they coordinated in time? We use behavioral experiments to compare speed limits for different features and the dynamics of how these features are bound into a coherent percept. One coordination problem occurs because when an object moves across the visual field, it stimulates different populations of neurons in early visual cortex, so we're testing how the signals from different areas are combined by later stages of the brain. Overall, fast processes somehow work together with others that are very sluggish in order to yield conscious perception. Recently we've begun investigating related issues in tactile perception.
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Collaborators:
Patrick Byrne, [[User:Alex_L._White|Alex White]],Christina J. Howard, Jay Edelman,Patrick Cavanagh,Sara Mednick,
[http://www.h.kyoto-u.ac.jp/staff/131_saiki_j_0_e.html Jun Saiki],
Gene Stoner, Eli Brenner, Sasha Klistorner,
[[User:Tatjana Seizova-Cajic|Tatjana Seizova-Cajic]],[http://www.med.unsw.edu.au/medweb.nsf/page/resinterestsshowperson?OpenDocument&staffid=3048331 Evelyn Smith-Bergelund], [http://www.physiol.usyd.edu.au/span/ University Perception Group]
Eric Altschuler,[http://dlinares.org/ Daniel Linares], Maryam Vaziri-Pashkam...
==Recent updates to the lab wiki==
==Recent updates to the lab wiki==
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<!--The line below includes a list of recent changes to your lab wiki on your homepage.  If you've named your pages in the form <Holcombe>:Page name.  Then you should just be able to replace the LabName below with your course's number and it should work.-->

Revision as of 02:51, 5 November 2012

Lab and Office Location

Recent members

Alex Holcombe
• Ryo Nakayama



Technical

Skills Checklist
Python Programming
Psychopy/VisionEgg Installation Notes
R analysis,plot,stats
Statistics
Buttonbox
Buttonbox with photocell
Programming Cheat Sheets


We're curious about temporal aspects of human visual processing - how quickly do different cortical modules and stages process information, and how are they coordinated in time? We use behavioral experiments to compare speed limits for different features and the dynamics of how these features are bound into a coherent percept. One coordination problem occurs because when an object moves across the visual field, it stimulates different populations of neurons in early visual cortex, so we're testing how the signals from different areas are combined by later stages of the brain. Overall, fast processes somehow work together with others that are very sluggish in order to yield conscious perception. Recently we've begun investigating related issues in tactile perception.

Collaborators: Patrick Byrne, Alex White,Christina J. Howard, Jay Edelman,Patrick Cavanagh,Sara Mednick, Jun Saiki, Gene Stoner, Eli Brenner, Sasha Klistorner, Tatjana Seizova-Cajic,Evelyn Smith-Bergelund, University Perception Group Eric Altschuler,Daniel Linares, Maryam Vaziri-Pashkam...

Recent updates to the lab wiki

List of abbreviations:
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11 February 2026

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10 February 2026