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pro vyhledávání: '"Hugh R. Wilson"'
Autor:
Hugh R. Wilson
Publikováno v:
Scientific Reports, Vol 9, Iss 1, Pp 1-6 (2019)
Abstract Unpredictable escape behaviour is an integral part of the repertoire of many prey species. Many social species, including humans, also employ unpredictability to enhance their chances of success in social interactions with conspecifics. Howe
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/1f89fbf0f5e640818d7dd8778eb45382
Autor:
Marwan Daar, Hugh R. Wilson
Publikováno v:
PeerJ, Vol 4, p e2068 (2016)
Four-dot masking with a common onset mask was recently demonstrated in a fully attended and foveated target (Filmer, Mattingley & Dux, 2015). Here, we replicate and extend this finding by directly comparing a four-dot mask with an annulus mask while
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/5ba5b36bfbe546a6b17da6035047dfcc
Autor:
Ozgur E. Akman, Richard A. Clement, David S. Broomhead, Sabira Mannan, Ian Moorhead, Hugh R. Wilson
Publikováno v:
Journal of Eye Movement Research, Vol 1, Iss 3 (2009)
The selection of fixation targets involves a combination of top-down and bottom-up processing. The role of bottom-up processing can be enhanced by using multistable stimuli because their constantly changing appearance seems to depend predominantly on
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/6a01e56d8e2a495092ca15af13782cdc
Autor:
Jack D. Cowan, Hugh R. Wilson
Publikováno v:
Biological Cybernetics. 115:643-653
The Wilson-Cowan equations were developed to provide a simplified yet powerful description of neural network dynamics. As such, they embraced nonlinear dynamics, but in an interpretable form. Most importantly, it was the first mathematical formulatio
Autor:
Hugh R. Wilson
Publikováno v:
Journal of neurophysiology. 122(6)
The Wilson–Cowan equations were originally shown to produce limit cycle oscillations for a range of parameters. Others subsequently showed that two coupled Wilson–Cowan oscillators could produce chaos, especially if the oscillator coupling was fr
Autor:
Laurent Mottron, Armando Bertone, Hugh R. Wilson, Karine Morin, Linda S. Pagani, Jacalyn Guy, Claudine Habak
Publikováno v:
Autism Research. 8:497-506
Face perception is the most commonly used visual metric of social perception in autism. However, when found to be atypical, the origin of face perception differences in autism is contentious. One hypothesis proposes that a locally oriented visual ana
Autor:
Hugh R. Wilson
Publikováno v:
Vision research. 140
It is well known that small orientation differences between two monocular gratings fuse to generate a stereoscopic perception of tilt, while large differences trigger binocular rivalry. In addition, unequal monocular contrasts combine nonlinearly to
Publikováno v:
Journal of vision. 17(1)
Atypical face perception has been associated with the socio-communicative difficulties that characterize autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Growing evidence, however, suggests that a widespread impairment in face perception is not as common as once thou
Autor:
Xiaoqing Gao, Hugh R. Wilson
Publikováno v:
Vision Research. 99:12-18
The human visual system can implicitly extract a prototype of encountered visual objects (Posner & Keele, 1968). While learning a prototype provides an efficient way of encoding objects at the category level, discrimination among individual objects r