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1 ith changes in the magnitude of responses to visual stimuli.
2 ysiological process that is often induced by visual stimuli.
3 in the processing of erotic versus monetary visual stimuli.
4 es of conscious perception of near-threshold visual stimuli.
5 ns that disrupt excitatory responsiveness to visual stimuli.
6 iewing one of three different, high-contrast visual stimuli.
7 task with words but not other categories of visual stimuli.
8 ral posterior medial region (VPM) respond to visual stimuli.
9 ibited altered neural responses to predicted visual stimuli.
10 xture, color, depth, and other attributes of visual stimuli.
11 tex that allows the distinction of different visual stimuli.
12 fly brain generates behavioral responses to visual stimuli.
13 ) are selective for particular properties of visual stimuli.
14 RI, while they viewed multiple categories of visual stimuli.
15 their right-eye to investigate a variety of visual stimuli.
16 to modulate perception of briefly presented visual stimuli.
17 t bias newborns to orient to relevant social visual stimuli.
18 on but selectively to additional features of visual stimuli.
19 s and the perceived numerosity of subsequent visual stimuli.
20 ral posterior medial region (VPM) respond to visual stimuli.
21 manifested as reduced amygdala reactivity to visual stimuli.
22 ry distraction during selective attention to visual stimuli.
23 mbly activity to the behavioral detection of visual stimuli.
24 cortical neurons in behaving mice subject to visual stimuli.
25 tical reverberation during the processing of visual stimuli.
26 l to the features that link the auditory and visual stimuli.
27 ethered flying moths experiencing wide-field visual stimuli.
28 t tones were presented concurrently with the visual stimuli.
29 e amplitude of responses to higher-frequency visual stimuli.
30 hich discriminated between trained and novel visual stimuli.
31 reaction due to exposure to complex motions visual stimuli.
32 ssing amacrine cells (ACs) to a broad set of visual stimuli.
33 data while subjects observed threshold-level visual stimuli.
34 e different amounts of reward in response to visual stimuli.
35 Ca(2+) signals required for transmission of visual stimuli.
36 ption by attending to one of three different visual stimuli.
37 thfully conveying the physical properties of visual stimuli.
38 li but can be activated by somatosensory and visual stimuli.
39 requirements and the behavioral relevance of visual stimuli.
40 In addition, 14% of neurons responded to visual stimuli.
41 ns in the human brain represent whole-object visual stimuli.
42 lly with fixed and task-neutral auditory and visual stimuli.
43 nhibition was delivered to V1 independent of visual stimuli.
44 provide a unified signal for self-generated visual stimuli.
45 y assumptions with two families of ambiguous visual stimuli.
46 th different response properties to incoming visual stimuli.
47 pine challenge while subjects viewed salient visual stimuli.
48 nsory training with interleaved auditory and visual stimuli.
49 networks to process the broad repertoire of visual stimuli.
50 ot generate courtship song in the absence of visual stimuli.
51 arental brain with a range of baby audio and visual stimuli.
52 selectivity of cortical neuron responses to visual stimuli.
53 k consisting of erotic, monetary and neutral visual stimuli.
54 ult mice, in response to a systematic set of visual stimuli.
55 avioral and neural responses to auditory and visual stimuli.
56 and to some extent for auditory, but not for visual stimuli.
57 ng timing parameters that resulted in RS for visual stimuli.
58 rs to brain reward activation in response to visual stimuli.
59 at are responsive to different components of visual stimuli.
60 ize painful stimuli or to fixate on or track visual stimuli.
61 reased linearly with increasing attention to visual stimuli.
62 respond to easily describable categories of visual stimuli.
63 n neighbouring neurons in awake mice viewing visual stimuli.
64 and may prefer viewing informationally rich visual stimuli.
65 vertly attended or prepared eye movements to visual stimuli.
66 e evolved systems for processing complicated visual stimuli.
67 better at facilitating stress reduction than visual stimuli.
68 mpatiens) ability to learn associations with visual stimuli.
69 l (auditory or visual) and multimodal (audio-visual) stimuli.
72 d enhances neural representations of trained visual stimuli, a phenomenon known as visual perceptual
73 led environment in which tethered bees learn visual stimuli, a result that is important for future ne
74 rats to report the orientation of ambiguous visual stimuli according to a spatial stimulus-response
76 can change their behavior upon detection of visual stimuli according to the outcome their actions pr
78 information and modulate their attention to visual stimuli, allowing them to recognize words on the
79 teral pathway strongly prefers to respond to visual stimuli along the cardinal (horizontal and vertic
80 is limited to rather slow and low-frequency visual stimuli, although it can be adaptably improved by
81 om the murine LGN during the presentation of visual stimuli, analyzed the results with different comp
82 on, it is the first system to project moving visual stimuli and analyze the optomotor response in the
83 in humans during stimulation with identical visual stimuli and analyzed how prestimulus neural oscil
85 mnar 16 (LC16) cells-that respond to looming visual stimuli and elicit backward walking and turning [
86 ncomplete, especially with regard to natural visual stimuli and in complete populations of cortical n
89 ex, with some regions responding to specific visual stimuli and others to specific auditory stimuli.
90 ates enhanced the mutual information between visual stimuli and single neuron responses over a fixed
92 s the entire Purkinje cell population during visual stimuli and the reflexive behaviors that they eli
94 tion was small relative to that for repeated visual stimuli and was related to post-stimulation inhib
96 works and have both shared (e.g. encoding of visual stimuli) and dissociated (e.g. quantity processin
97 re biased towards the center when localizing visual stimuli, and biased towards the periphery when lo
98 nent of the electroencephalogram elicited by visual stimuli, and cognitive functions in children grow
99 argely based on stimulation using artificial visual stimuli, and it is unclear how these descriptions
100 Exposure to sensory stimuli, such as odours, visual stimuli, and sounds, commonly triggers migraine a
105 suggest that attention affects both the way visual stimuli are encoded within a cortical area and th
106 ockade, that contrast invariance occurs when visual stimuli are large enough to include the extraclas
107 attention when monitoring rapidly presented visual stimuli are perceived as effortful and devalue re
110 o this cardio-visual synchrony even when the visual stimuli are rendered invisible through interocula
111 Unlike nonhuman primate studies in which the visual stimuli are the objects to be grasped, the visual
114 l cataracts showed a bias towards perceiving visual stimuli as occurring earlier than auditory (Expt.
115 lity and selectivity of pyramidal neurons to visual stimuli, as confirmed by two-photon imaging.
116 reside in the mean strength of responses to visual stimuli, as reflected in bulk signals detectable
117 esembled natural internal representations of visual stimuli at cellular resolution over volumes of co
119 m the larval zebrafish tectum in response to visual stimuli at three closely spaced locations in the
120 e similarity between population responses to visual stimuli based on the information they carry.
121 NIFICANCE STATEMENT How do reward-predictive visual stimuli become salient and attention-drawing?
122 activity is increased by exposure to dynamic visual stimuli, blood vessels dilate and the flow of blo
125 BA neurons did not respond to arbitrary visual stimuli, but acquired responses to stimuli that p
126 poral-cortex (IT) neurons respond to complex visual stimuli, but differences in the neurons' response
127 detection, discrimination, and awareness of visual stimuli, but it is unknown how neuronal populatio
128 n that the neural representation of multiple visual stimuli can be accounted for by a divisive normal
130 ng, spatially restricted subregions in which visual stimuli can either increase or decrease the firin
133 s baited with human odour plus high contrast visual stimuli caught more Anopheles than traps with odo
134 om 0 to 1.5 mA), the detection accuracy of a visual stimuli changed according to an inverted-U-shaped
135 normal responsiveness to both vestibular and visual stimuli characterized by heightened self-motion s
137 ned and one new sensory component, and audio-visual stimuli containing completely new auditory and vi
138 isual stimuli from the learning phase, audio-visual stimuli containing one learned and one new sensor
139 dren to the dynamic and highly salient audio-visual stimuli conveyed by electronic media may induce a
142 this article, we characterize how changes in visual stimuli depicting specific objects (cars, faces,
143 reported that V1 LPZ responds to full-field visual stimuli during the one-back task (OBT), not durin
145 riminate visually presented faces from other visual stimuli, each method yields a different result, b
147 cortex (V1) have shown that local, oriented visual stimuli elicit stable orientation-selective activ
149 pread endogenous responses in the absence of visual stimuli, even at the earliest stages of visual co
153 y-induced transfer of VPL occurred only when visual stimuli for the category learning and those for V
155 g non-flight periods, effectively decoupling visual stimuli from the landing motor pathway when landi
156 er with new combinations of the auditory and visual stimuli from the learning phase, audio-visual sti
159 that nearly every action potential evoked by visual stimuli has characteristics of spikes initiated i
160 ) training paradigm (comprising auditory and visual stimuli) has gained much attention since studies
162 d violent stimuli versus nonaversive neutral visual stimuli in a functional magnetic resonance imagin
165 and local field potential (LFP) responses to visual stimuli in area V4 while monkeys covertly attende
169 One way to quantify information present in visual stimuli in natural scenes is evaluating their fra
170 babilistic structure underlying sequences of visual stimuli in newly hatched domestic chicks using fi
171 k to improve accommodative responses to near visual stimuli in patients wearing single vision (SV) an
172 ocessing, shapes neural responses to natural visual stimuli in primate Off parasol RGCs, whereas On p
174 OLD) signal to high-calorie food vs non-food visual stimuli in the ventral tegmental area (VTA), the
176 ts suggest that large, reliable responses to visual stimuli in V1 occur at a distinct arousal level f
179 nfigural stimuli when contrasted to inverted visual stimuli, in a manner similar to results with newb
180 lls exhibit a variety of responses to simple visual stimuli including two distinct classes that expre
181 Our results show that both auditory and visual stimuli increased activations in a right-laterali
187 receptors (NMDARs) is essential for encoding visual stimuli into signals for the brain, although thei
192 -chance accuracy in discriminating invisible visual stimuli, is evident in both blindsight patients a
193 Competition between simultaneously presented visual stimuli lengthens reaction time and reduces both
194 cs, few studies if any have explored whether visual stimuli looming toward the face predictively enha
195 z) of neural populations receptive to target visual stimuli may be part of the mechanism, because alp
197 ith complex regional pain syndrome processed visual stimuli more slowly on the affected side (relativ
198 es, and the reduction in neural responses to visual stimuli observed across the visual hierarchy.
199 ulate awareness for visual stimuli such that visual stimuli occurring at the cardiac frequency take l
200 ide-field inhibitory neuron that responds to visual stimuli of a particular orientation, a feature se
201 internal shifts of attention to memoranda of visual stimuli of different brightness maintained in wor
203 es during sustained exposure to standardized visual stimuli of stressful, alcohol cue, and neutral co
206 rm during presentation of static and dynamic visual stimuli on stereoscopic head-mounted goggles.
207 that, like humans, they discriminate between visual stimuli on the basis of fractal dimension and may
208 ss conditions, but improves the detection of visual stimuli only when activating cells that are prefe
210 amaged hemisphere was challenged by incoming visual stimuli, or controlled manual responses to these
211 attern elicited when participants viewed the visual stimuli passively, indicating shared representati
212 Postural metrics obtained during dynamic visual stimuli performed better in explaining history of
213 Here, we trained mice to discriminate two visual stimuli, precisely quantified when learning happe
214 ave shown that subjects are often unaware of visual stimuli presented around the time of an eye movem
215 ennal (olfactory) lobe were not modulated by visual stimuli presented before or after an olfactory st
216 linear enhancement of bipolar cell output to visual stimuli presented closely in space and time.
217 ent increase in visual cortical responses to visual stimuli presented during locomotion in intact mic
218 used subjects to underestimate the number of visual stimuli presented near the tapping region; and a
220 stimulation, showing reduced activation for visual stimuli presented synchronously to the heartbeat.
221 This phenomenon can significantly distort visual stimuli presented to aquatic animals in water, ye
222 ty of performing such an experiment based on visual stimuli projected through the uterine wall with f
223 ow show that chronic gamma entrainment using visual stimuli protects against several neurodegenerativ
224 , but preferentially impaired decisions when visual stimuli, rather than motor response targets, were
225 Quantifying single-cell Ca(2+) responses to visual stimuli recorded with in vivo two-photon imaging,
227 either slow (12.5 deg/s) or fast (50 deg/s) visual stimuli resulted in emergence of direction select
228 cortex GABA impairs the coding of particular visual stimuli, resulting in a dampening of visual proce
229 his activity is driven by the conjunction of visual stimuli sequences and active movement, which is s
230 nd for study of population representation of visual stimuli.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Electrophysiologic
232 ere required to discriminate 4 categories of visual stimuli (snakes, monkey faces, monkey hands and s
234 rity of resting states representing the task/visual stimuli states increased post-learning in the sam
236 gions are observed for novel and/or abstract visual stimuli such as point-light and android movements
237 ng sensory processing mechanisms for complex visual stimuli such as second-order boundaries defined b
238 interoceptive signals modulate awareness for visual stimuli such that visual stimuli occurring at the
239 sponses of these regions to a broad suite of visual stimuli suggest that they are involved in the reg
240 itive to confidence-modulating attributes of visual stimuli, suggesting contribution of ACC but not B
241 echniques and show that conscious access for visual stimuli synchronous to participants' heartbeat is
243 ed more information about the orientation of visual stimuli than neurons in deep layers, the opposite
244 cats responded approximately 3 ms faster to visual stimuli than ON-dominated cortical neurons, and d
245 to the presentation of combined auditory and visual stimuli than the same stimuli when presented in i
246 Here we have examined whether the speed of visual stimuli that are presented to visually naive ferr
247 Additionally we found that auditory and visual stimuli that cue the same hand shape are processe
248 Cs are reliable indicators of self-generated visual stimuli that may contribute to central processing
249 s to discriminate the direction of motion of visual stimuli that varied in size across trials, while
250 ents of the magnitude of differences between visual stimuli, that provide a means to bridge the gap b
251 g on air, and trained to pick lanes based on visual stimuli, the asymmetric movement, and position of
253 We next show that, when co-applied with visual stimuli, the magnitude of responses to whisker de
256 ts had typical neural responses to presented visual stimuli, they exhibited altered neural responses
257 display varying degree of responsiveness to visual stimuli through each eye, which determines their
258 nipulated the prior for dynamic auditory and visual stimuli to co-occur and tested the predicted enha
259 es (1,850 individuals) that presented erotic visual stimuli to men and women of different sexual orie
262 al advances have made it possible to deliver visual stimuli to the retina that probe this processing
264 assessment of postural reactivity to dynamic visual stimuli using a virtual reality environment.
267 or modeling human perception of second-order visual stimuli, using image-computable hierarchical neur
268 onse times to left, but not right, hemifield visual stimuli, via an asymmetric effect on right-hemisp
270 ensitivity and face sensitivity to identical visual stimuli (videos of human and dog faces and occipu
274 n the task was more difficult, even when the visual stimuli were far outside the receptive fields of
278 test phase the previously encountered audio-visual stimuli were presented together with new combinat
281 als (VEP), in response to 60' and 15' checks visual stimuli, were recorded at baseline in all subject
282 predictive saccades synchronized to periodic visual stimuli when an immediate reward was given for ev
285 nd eyes can rescue the ability to respond to visual stimuli when wild-type eyes are surgically remove
286 ent and suppression compared with unisensory visual stimuli, whereas incongruent or dissimilar stimul
287 s: layer 5 neurons are more broadly tuned to visual stimuli, whereas mean orientation selectivity of
288 sembles that reliably and accurately encoded visual stimuli, whereas reducing spatial correlations re
289 C layers (sSC) contain cells that respond to visual stimuli, whereas the deep SC layers (dSC) contain
290 minergic and behavioral responses to salient visual stimuli, which were independent of learning, and
293 onses of single IT cortex neurons to complex visual stimuli while separately adapting the two putativ
294 Here, using naturalistic rates of looming visual stimuli while simultaneously monitoring escape be
295 Object motion in natural scenes results in visual stimuli with a rich and broad spatiotemporal freq
296 erforming traps, however, combined odour and visual stimuli with a thermal signature in the range equ
297 that mosquitoes integrate general attractive visual stimuli with context-dependent thermal stimuli to
300 s of experiments that the relative timing of visual stimuli with respect to the heartbeat modulates v