
- COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY 35, 7198 (1998) ARTICLE NO. CG970673
- Seeing slow and seeing fast: two limits on perception
- process variance, as population sizes at the onset and termination of the experimental seasons could be determined without sampling error.
- THIS IS AN AUTHOR-GENERATED PREPRINT OF A MANUSCRIPT IN-PRESS IN CURRENT BIOLOGY
- TRENDS in Cognitive Sciences Vol.6 No.8 August 2002 http://tics.trends.com 1364-6613/02/$ see front matter 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved. PII: S1364-6613(02)01945-9
- Holcombe, AO (2009). The Binding Problem. . In E. Bruce. Goldstein (Ed.), The Sage Encyclopedia of Perception. Sage. PRE-PRINT, NOT THE PUBLISHED VERSION
- Elsevier Science 1 Running Head: Illusory motion reversals
- Independent, synchronous access to color and motion features
- 1 Introduction Gazing at a flower garden through a window streaked with rain, one is aware of the
- Ancient history of sexual arousal and alcohol For if a man drink wine to drunkenness,
- neuroimaging results should be used with appropriate caution. There is, at present, no validated objective
- A developmental theory of synaesthesia, with long historical roots Alex O. Holcombe, Eric L. Altschuler, & Harriet J. Over
- Repetition Priming in Visual Search: Episodic Retrieval, not Feature Priming
- The world is full of moving objects and people whose motions are complex and frequently changing. As pedes-
- 1 Introduction Physiological recordings show that initial coding in the visual system provides reliable
- Online Evidence Charts to Help Students Systematically Evaluate Theories and Alex O. Holcombe, alex.holcombe@sydney.edu.au
- The Midstream Order Deficit Alex O. Holcombe
- The spoke brightness illusion originates at an early motion processing stage Alex O. Holcombe
- Conclusions 1.Large separation condition rejects spatial