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Scientific Reports
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March 1, 2026
The effect of unilateral cortical blindness on lane position and gaze behavior in a virtual reality steering task
Arianna P Giguere, Matthew R Cavanaugh, Krystel R Huxlin, et al.
Translational Vision Science & Technology
|
June 6, 2025
Evolution of Visual Field Defects After Occipital Stroke: A Quantitative Analysis
Elizabeth L Saionz, Matthew R Cavanaugh, Brent A Johnson, et al.
Biorxiv : the Preprint Server for Biology
|
February 20, 2025
The effect of unilateral cortical blindness on lane position and gaze behavior in a virtual reality steering task
Arianna P Giguere, Matthew R Cavanaugh, Krystel R Huxlin, et al.
Stroke
|
July 16, 2021
Optic Tract Shrinkage Limits Visual Restoration After Occipital Stroke
Berkeley K Fahrenthold, Matthew R Cavanaugh, Subin Jang, et al.
Nature Communications
|
October 21, 2021
Spared perilesional V1 activity underlies training-induced recovery of luminance detection sensitivity in cortically-blind patients
Antoine Barbot, Anasuya Das, Michael D Melnick, et al.
Journal of Vision
|
September 22, 2015
Visual recovery in cortical blindness is limited by high internal noise
Matthew R Cavanaugh, Ruyuan Zhang, Michael D Melnick, et al.
Brain Communications
|
October 21, 2024
Rehabilitating homonymous visual field deficits: white matter markers of recovery-stage 1 registered report
Hanna E Willis, Matthew R Cavanaugh, Sara Ajina, et al.
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science
|
April 18, 2024
Training in Cortically Blinded Fields Appears to Confer Patient-Specific Benefit Against Retinal Thinning
Berkeley K Fahrenthold, Matthew R Cavanaugh, Madhura Tamhankar, et al.
Medrxiv : the Preprint Server for Health Sciences
|
January 10, 2024
Training in cortically-blind fields confers patient-specific benefit against retinal thinning after occipital stroke
Berkeley K Fahrenthold, Matthew R Cavanaugh, Madhura Tamhankar, et al.
Progress in Brain Research
|
May 23, 2025
Persistence of training-induced visual improvements after occipital stroke
Hanna E Willis, Berkeley Fahrenthold, Rebecca S Millington-Truby, et al.
Page
of 3
Search research articles
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Showing results (11-20 of 26) with videos related to
Sort By:
Page
of 3
Scientific Reports
|
March 1, 2026
The effect of unilateral cortical blindness on lane position and gaze behavior in a virtual reality steering task
Arianna P Giguere, Matthew R Cavanaugh, Krystel R Huxlin, et al.
Translational Vision Science & Technology
|
June 6, 2025
Evolution of Visual Field Defects After Occipital Stroke: A Quantitative Analysis
Elizabeth L Saionz, Matthew R Cavanaugh, Brent A Johnson, et al.
Biorxiv : the Preprint Server for Biology
|
February 20, 2025
The effect of unilateral cortical blindness on lane position and gaze behavior in a virtual reality steering task
Arianna P Giguere, Matthew R Cavanaugh, Krystel R Huxlin, et al.
Stroke
|
July 16, 2021
Optic Tract Shrinkage Limits Visual Restoration After Occipital Stroke
Berkeley K Fahrenthold, Matthew R Cavanaugh, Subin Jang, et al.
Nature Communications
|
October 21, 2021
Spared perilesional V1 activity underlies training-induced recovery of luminance detection sensitivity in cortically-blind patients
Antoine Barbot, Anasuya Das, Michael D Melnick, et al.
Journal of Vision
|
September 22, 2015
Visual recovery in cortical blindness is limited by high internal noise
Matthew R Cavanaugh, Ruyuan Zhang, Michael D Melnick, et al.
Brain Communications
|
October 21, 2024
Rehabilitating homonymous visual field deficits: white matter markers of recovery-stage 1 registered report
Hanna E Willis, Matthew R Cavanaugh, Sara Ajina, et al.
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science
|
April 18, 2024
Training in Cortically Blinded Fields Appears to Confer Patient-Specific Benefit Against Retinal Thinning
Berkeley K Fahrenthold, Matthew R Cavanaugh, Madhura Tamhankar, et al.
Medrxiv : the Preprint Server for Health Sciences
|
January 10, 2024
Training in cortically-blind fields confers patient-specific benefit against retinal thinning after occipital stroke
Berkeley K Fahrenthold, Matthew R Cavanaugh, Madhura Tamhankar, et al.
Progress in Brain Research
|
May 23, 2025
Persistence of training-induced visual improvements after occipital stroke
Hanna E Willis, Berkeley Fahrenthold, Rebecca S Millington-Truby, et al.
Page
of 3