Jove
Visualize
Contact Us
JoVE
x logofacebook logolinkedin logoyoutube logo
ABOUT JoVE
OverviewLeadershipBlogJoVE Help Center
AUTHORS
Publishing ProcessEditorial BoardScope & PoliciesPeer ReviewFAQSubmit
LIBRARIANS
TestimonialsSubscriptionsAccessResourcesLibrary Advisory BoardFAQ
RESEARCH
JoVE JournalMethods CollectionsJoVE Encyclopedia of ExperimentsArchive
EDUCATION
JoVE CoreJoVE BusinessJoVE Science EducationJoVE Lab ManualFaculty Resource CenterFaculty Site
Terms & Conditions of Use
Privacy Policy
Policies

Filters

Ryan T Maloney

Showing results (1-10 of 24) with videos related to

Pageof 3
Sort By:
Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience|December 13, 2021
Neuromodulation and IndividualityRyan T Maloney
Journal of Neurophysiology|May 30, 2014
The basis of orientation decoding in human primary visual cortex: fine- or coarse-scale biases?Ryan T Maloney
Neuroimage|June 21, 2015
Orientation anisotropies in human primary visual cortex depend on contrastRyan T Maloney, Colin W G Clifford
Perception|January 17, 2008
Things are looking up: differential decline in face recognition following pitch and yaw rotationSimone K Favelle, Stephen Palmisano, Ryan T Maloney
Perception|December 13, 2017
Directional Limits on Motion Transparency Assessed Through Colour-Motion BindingRyan T Maloney, Colin W G Clifford, Isabelle Mareschal
Biology Letters|November 23, 2012
Colour misbinding during motion rivalryRyan T Maloney, Sarah K Lam, Colin W G Clifford
Neuroimage|July 5, 2014
Determinants of motion response anisotropies in human early visual cortex: the role of configuration and eccentricityRyan T Maloney, Tamara L Watson, Colin W G Clifford
Perception|April 20, 2017
Probing the Characteristics of Colour-Motion Binding and Its Dependence on Persistent Surface SegregationGabriel J Vigano, Ryan T Maloney, Colin W G Clifford
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience|April 18, 2014
Motion-defined surface segregation in human visual cortexGabriel J Vigano, Ryan T Maloney, Colin W G Clifford
Journal of Vision|July 30, 2015
Transparent surface segregation enables visual feature binding in rapidly alternating displaysGabriel J Vigano, Ryan T Maloney, Colin W G Clifford
Pageof 3

Showing results (1-10 of 24) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 3
Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience|December 13, 2021
Neuromodulation and IndividualityRyan T Maloney
Journal of Neurophysiology|May 30, 2014
The basis of orientation decoding in human primary visual cortex: fine- or coarse-scale biases?Ryan T Maloney
Neuroimage|June 21, 2015
Orientation anisotropies in human primary visual cortex depend on contrastRyan T Maloney, Colin W G Clifford
Perception|January 17, 2008
Things are looking up: differential decline in face recognition following pitch and yaw rotationSimone K Favelle, Stephen Palmisano, Ryan T Maloney
Perception|December 13, 2017
Directional Limits on Motion Transparency Assessed Through Colour-Motion BindingRyan T Maloney, Colin W G Clifford, Isabelle Mareschal
Biology Letters|November 23, 2012
Colour misbinding during motion rivalryRyan T Maloney, Sarah K Lam, Colin W G Clifford
Neuroimage|July 5, 2014
Determinants of motion response anisotropies in human early visual cortex: the role of configuration and eccentricityRyan T Maloney, Tamara L Watson, Colin W G Clifford
Perception|April 20, 2017
Probing the Characteristics of Colour-Motion Binding and Its Dependence on Persistent Surface SegregationGabriel J Vigano, Ryan T Maloney, Colin W G Clifford
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience|April 18, 2014
Motion-defined surface segregation in human visual cortexGabriel J Vigano, Ryan T Maloney, Colin W G Clifford
Journal of Vision|July 30, 2015
Transparent surface segregation enables visual feature binding in rapidly alternating displaysGabriel J Vigano, Ryan T Maloney, Colin W G Clifford
Pageof 3