
- 95:3654-3664, 2006. First published Mar 1, 2006; doi:10.1152/jn.01156.2005J Neurophysiol Serge O. Dumoulin and Robert F. Hess
- Structural sparseness and spatial phase alignment in natural scenes
- Only two phase mechanisms, cosine, in human vision P.-C. Huang *, F.A.A. Kingdom, R.F. Hess
- Collinear facilitation in color vision McGill Vision Research Unit, Department of Ophthalmology,
- Measurement of suprathreshold binocular interactions in amblyopia B. Mansouri, B. Thompson, R.F. Hess *
- Ladder contours are undetectable in the periphery: A crowding effect?
- r Human Brain Mapping 30:40544069 (2009) r Selectivity as well as Sensitivity Loss
- The spatial frequency and orientation selectivity of the mechanisms that extract motion-defined contours q
- Stereo dynamics are not scale-dependent Robert F. Hess *, Laurie M. Wilcox
- A critical band of phase alignment for discrimination but not recognition of human faces
- Integration of first-and second-order orientation Harriet A. Allen, Robert F. Hess, and Behzad Mansouri
- Global motion processing: The effect of spatial scale and eccentricity
- Rules for combining the outputs of local motion detectors to define simple contours
- Binocular influences on global motion processing in the human visual system
- Vision Research 40 (2000) 493502 Global factors that determine the maximum disparity for seeing
- COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE Deficient responses from the lateral geniculate nucleus
- Differential binocular input and local stereopsis Robert F. Hess a,*, Chang Hong Liu b
- Luminance spatial scale and local stereo-sensitivity Robert F Hess a,*, Chang Hong Liu b
- Contour interaction for an easily resolvable Robert F. Hess, Cristyn B. Williams, and Asif Chaudhry
- Journal of Vision (2003) 3, 616-624 http://journalofvision.org/3/10/4/ 616 Sensitivity for global shape detection
- The extent of the dorsal extra-striate deficit in amblyopia A.J. Simmers b
- Poor encoding of position by contrast-defined motion Harriet A. Allen a,*, Tim Ledgeway b
- 1 Introduction Our ability to estimate the position of an object depends on whether its surface markings
- The dynamics of collinear facilitation: Fast but sustained Pi-Chun Huang *, Robert F. Hess
- Amblyopic perception of biological motion McGill Vision Research, Department of Ophthalmology,
- Second-Order Optic Flow Deficits in Amblyopia Craig Aaen-Stockdale,1
- Binocular Summation of Contrast Remains Intact in Strabismic Amblyopia
- Dynamics of snakes and ladders McGill Vision Research Unit, Department of Ophthalmology,
- Peripheral vision: Good for biological motion, bad for signal noise segregation?
- Discrimination of amplitude spectrum slope in the fovea and parafovea and the local amplitude distributions of
- The accessibility of spatial channels for stereo and motion Robert F. Hess a,*, Yi-Zhong Wang c
- The global processing deficit in amblyopia involves noise segregation Behzad Mansouri *, Robert F. Hess
- Foveal contour interaction: detection and discrimination
- Haphazard neural connections underlie the visual deficits of cats with strabismic or deprivation amblyopia
- The spatial localization deficit in visually deprived kittens Guy Gingras a
- Integration, segregation, and binocular combination
- Investigating local network interactions underlying first-and second-order processing
- Journal of Vision (2004) 4, 843-859 http://journalofvision.org/4/10/2/ 843 Low spatial frequencies are suppressively
- Lateral interactions in amblyopia Dave Ellemberg, Robert F. Hess *, A. Serge Arsenault
- Vision Research 41 (2001) 10231037 Dynamics of contour integration
- Vision Research 41 (2001) 22852296 Contour interaction in amblyopia: scale selection
- Spatial Vision, Vol. 13, No. 1, pp. 5166 (2000) VSP 2000.
- Contour interaction in fovea and periphery Robert F. Hess, Steven C. Dakin, Neil Kapoor, and Marc Tewfik
- Vision Research 40 (2000) 365370 Rapid communication
- Vision Research 40 (2000) 21252133 What limits the contribution of second-order motion to the
- Vision Research 40 (2000) 35853597 The properties of the motion-detecting mechanisms mediating
- A Double Dissociation Between Striate and Extrastriate Visual Cortex for Pattern Motion
- Biological motion perception is cue-invariant McGill Vision Research, Department of Ophthalmology,
- Contrast masking in strabismic amblyopia: Attenuation, noise, interocular suppression and binocular summation
- Effects of element separation and carrier wavelength on detection of snakes and ladders: Implications for
- Current Biology 18, 10671071, July 22, 2008 2008 Elsevier Ltd All rights reserved DOI 10.1016/j.cub.2008.06.052 Brain Plasticity in the Adult
- This article was published in an Elsevier journal. The attached copy is furnished to the author for non-commercial research and
- Orientation sensitivity in human visual motion processing N.E. Scott-Samuel *,1
- Rapid communication Interocular suppression is gated by interocular feature matching
- Integration of local motion is normal in amblyopia Robert F. Hess and Behzad Mansouri
- The detection of direction-defined and speed-defined spatial contours: one mechanism or two?
- Second-order spatial frequency and orientation channels in human vision
- Failure of direction identification for briefly presented second-order motion stimuli: evidence for weak direction
- Second-order optic flow processing Craig Aaen-Stockdale a,*, Tim Ledgeway b
- The influences of visibility and anomalous integration processes on the perception of global spatial form versus motion in human
- The role of spatial phase in texture segmentation and contour integration
- 1 Introduction A long-standing dichotomy in vision research is that between short-range and
- The effect of manipulations to target contrast on emmetropization in chick q
- The amblyopic deficit for global motion is spatial scale invariant Craig Aaen-Stockdale *, Robert F. Hess
- Vision Research 40 (2000) 11671177 Stereodeficient subjects demonstrate non-linear stereopsis
- Luminance spatial scale facilitates stereoscopic depth segmentation
- Threshold Vision in Amblyopia: Orientation and Phase Robert F. Hess1,2
- Low-level mechanisms may contribute to paradoxical motion percepts
- On the decline of 1st and 2nd order sensitivity with eccentricity
- Importance of phase alignment for interocular suppression Goro Maehara a,*, Pi-Chun Huang b
- Plaid perception is only subtly impaired in strabismic amblyopia Benjamin Thompson *, Craig R. Aaen-Stockdale, Behzad Mansouri, Robert F. Hess
- Latent Stereopsis for Motion in Depth in Strabismic Amblyopia
- The transient nature of 2nd-order stereopsis Robert F. Hess a,*, Laurie M. Wilcox b
- Flank facilitation and contour integration: Different sites Pi-Chun Huang a,*, Robert F. Hess a
- Collinear facilitation: Effect of additive and multiplicative external noise Pi-Chun Huang *, Robert F. Hess
- Contributions of local orientation and position features to shape integration
- Disrupted Retinotopic Maps in Amblyopia Behzad Mansouri,1
- 1 Introduction One well-established feature of early vision is that it contains a set of spatially tuned
- Detection of contrast-defined shape Robert F. Hess and Rebecca L. Achtman
- Vision Research 40 (2000) 35753584 The effects of blur and size on monocular and stereoscopic
- Spatial Vision, Vol. 13, No. 4, pp. 377391 (2000) VSP 2000.
- Orientation variance discrimination in amblyopia Behzad Mansouri,1,
- contrast sensitivity Robert.Hess@McGill.CA
- http://mvr.mcgill.ca/Robert/ rhess_home.html