287 research outputs found

    The theory of binocular vision. Edited by Bruce Bridgeman and Lawrence Stark

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    THE THEORY OF BINOCULAR VISION. EDITED BY BRUCE BRIDGEMAN AND LAWRENCE STARK The theory of binocular vision. Edited by Bruce Bridgeman and Lawrence Stark (-

    Dynamic phenomenology of grapheme-color synesthesia

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    In grapheme-color synesthesia, observers perceive colors that are associated with letters and numbers. We tested the dynamic limits of this phenomenon by exposing two synesthetes to characters that rotate smoothly, that morph into other characters, that disappear abruptly, or that have colors either consistent or inconsistent with the corresponding synesthetic color. Rotating letters changed their synesthetic colors abruptly as letter identification changed or failed. Morphing letters also changed color together with a change in letter identification. Abrupt disappearance of a black character on a white background yielded a negative afterimage, but maintenance of the same synesthetic color. Our synesthetes could maintain both physical and synesthetic color in the same character, without conflict. Neon color spreading in one observer occurred for physical but not synesthetic color. These and other results show close linking of synesthetic color with character identity rather than image properties, in contrast to physical color

    Wahrnehmung

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    Bridgeman B, Prinz W, eds. Wahrnehmung. Enzyklopädie der Psychologie: Themenbereich C, Theorie und Forschung: Serie II, Kognition; 1. Göttingen: Hogrefe; 1994

    Enhancing Implicit Change Detection through Action

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    Implicit change detection demonstrates how the visual system can benefit from stored information that is not immediately available to conscious awareness. We investigated the role of motor action in this context. In the first two experiments, using a one-shot implicit change-detection paradigm, participants responded to unperceived changes either with an action (jabbing the screen at the guessed location of a change) or with words (verbal report), and sat either 60 cm or 300 cm (with a laser pointer) away from the display. Our observers guessed the locations of changes at a reachable distance better with an action than with a verbal judgment. At 300 cm, beyond reach, the motor advantage disappeared. In experiment 3, this advantage was also unavailable when participants sat at a reachable distance but responded with hand-held laser pointers near their bodies. We conclude that a motor system specialized for real-time visually guided behavior has access to additional visual information. Importantly, this system is not activated by merely executing an action (experiment 2) or presenting stimuli in one's near space (experiment 3). It is activated only when both conditions are fulfilled, which implies that it is the actual contact that matters to the visual system. </jats:p

    Bruce Bridgeman (1944–2016)

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    Erratum: Functional role of T-cell receptor nanoclusters in signal initiation and antigen discrimination

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    IMMUNOLOGY AND INFLAMMATION: Correction for "Functional role of T-cell receptor nanoclusters in signal initiation and antigen discrimination," by Sophie V. Pageon, Thibault Tabarin, Yui Yamamoto, Yuanqing Ma, John S. Bridgeman, André Cohnen, Carola Benzing, Yijun Gao, Michael D. Crowther, Katie Tungatt, Garry Dolton, Andrew K. Sewell, David A. Price, Oreste Acuto, Robert G. Parton, J. Justin Gooding, Jérémie Rossy, Jamie Rossjohn, and Katharina Gaus, which appeared in issue 37, September 13, 2016, of Proc Natl Acad Sci USA (113:E5454-5463; first published August 29, 2016; 10.1073/pnas.1607436113). The authors note that Philip R. Nicovich should be added to the author list between Yuanqing Ma and John S. Bridgeman. Philip R. Nicovich should be credited with contributing new reagents/analytic tools. The corrected author line, affiliation line, and author contributions appear below. The online version has been corrected
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