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1 hin the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) and visual cortical areas.
2  object and spatial scaling is common to all visual cortical areas.
3 he cat before and after selective lesions in visual cortical areas.
4 port specialized perceptual roles for higher visual cortical areas.
5 in certain extrastriate, but not in striate, visual cortical areas.
6  sequential replay of multistep sequences in visual cortical areas.
7 wn influence on sensory responses in primate visual cortical areas.
8 ctivity that propagate across the surface of visual cortical areas.
9 ngle-unit and population responses in higher visual cortical areas.
10 ionship between connectivity and function in visual cortical areas.
11 -error adjustments by modulating activity in visual cortical areas.
12  receive prominent inputs from virtually all visual cortical areas.
13 e a solid handle on the global topography of visual cortical areas.
14 ions in neural activity, particularly within visual cortical areas.
15 t cannot be attributed to the dysfunction of visual cortical areas.
16 or driving the functional differentiation of visual cortical areas.
17 ed on an interaction between polysensory and visual cortical areas.
18  of these projections to the pulvinar across visual cortical areas.
19 s slowed in migraine for early but not later visual cortical areas.
20 arp and is similar to the tuning observed in visual cortical areas.
21 t the shape integration is mediated by later visual cortical areas.
22 py and spatial frequency tuning, in multiple visual cortical areas.
23 al perception are based on activity in early visual cortical areas.
24 procal effects of localized damage to either visual cortical areas 17 and 18, or posteromedial latera
25    Following unilateral removal of all known visual cortical areas, a cat is rendered hemianopic in t
26 e propose that feedback from higher to lower visual cortical areas activates an explicit neural repre
27 s and Arc/Arg3.1 in auditory and neighboring visual cortical areas after bilateral deafness in young
28 r responsiveness to relative depth in higher visual cortical areas, again consistent with the finding
29 injections into somatosensory, auditory, and visual cortical areas almost all produced terminal label
30  V4 is extensively interconnected with other visual cortical areas along the ventral and dorsal visua
31 t learned value modulates spatial signals in visual cortical areas, an effect that correlates with VD
32               Here, we show that prospective visual cortical areas and corresponding thalamic nuclei
33  differences within functionally specialized visual cortical areas and deactivation differences in th
34                       We conclude that early visual cortical areas and DNN layers deploy different ge
35  to deficits arising from alterations in all visual cortical areas and even in nonvisual cortical reg
36 deep layers receive inputs from extrastriate visual cortical areas and from auditory, somatosensory,
37 n offsets that presumably originate in early visual cortical areas and then transform these sensory i
38 resonance imaging signals to define 12 human visual cortical areas, and then determined whether the r
39 isual responses less than V1 lesions, and no visual cortical area appears to entirely rely on SC inpu
40 l interactions between primary and secondary visual cortical areas are important for visual processin
41                                              Visual cortical areas are interconnected via layer-speci
42  that responses in retinotopically organized visual cortical areas are modulated by gain fields quali
43                  It is unknown whether early visual cortical areas are necessary for this improvement
44                                       Dorsal visual cortical areas are thought to be dominated by inp
45 a visual stimulus) affects the activities in visual cortical areas as early as in V1.
46 tial attention influences representations in visual cortical areas as well as perception.
47 ther such coding fluctuations occur in early visual cortical areas; (b) how coding fluctuations are c
48 at these changes are reflected in high-level visual cortical areas before they become apparent in ear
49 lvinar nucleus is a major source of input to visual cortical areas, but many important facts are stil
50 criminated eye position in five of the early visual cortical areas by taking advantage of a spatially
51                  The innervation of distinct visual cortical areas by the thalamus is especially segr
52 how that visual responses in a mouse lateral visual cortical area called the postrhinal cortex are in
53           Other studies have also shown that visual cortical areas can be activated by somatosensory
54      The results suggest that responses from visual cortical areas can be classified effectively usin
55  connections from a higher- to a lower-order visual cortical area carry predictions of lower-level ne
56 ck connections between primary and secondary visual cortical areas directly, we have performed intrac
57 However, interneuron numbers in piriform and visual cortical areas do not differ from those of normal
58 le difference in cortical activation in many visual cortical areas does not necessarily lead to diffe
59 hat guides the functional differentiation of visual cortical areas during development.
60 s showed activation of primary and secondary visual cortical areas during tactile tasks, whereas norm
61 d signal-to-noise ratios were higher in most visual cortical areas for color naming compared to diver
62 eurons progressively increase in neighboring visual cortical areas from 2 weeks after deafness and th
63       Top-down modulation of activity within visual cortical areas has been demonstrated through stud
64      Bottom-up hierarchical processing among visual cortical areas has been revealed in experiments t
65 istage feedforward neural processing between visual cortical areas, ignoring the likely impact of cor
66  measured the concentration of GABA in early visual cortical areas in a time-resolved fashion before,
67 s of neural activity traveling across entire visual cortical areas in awake animals.
68 binocular disparity are found in a number of visual cortical areas in primates, but there is little e
69              Unilateral removal of all known visual cortical areas in the cat renders the animal hemi
70 ude that the early, visuotopically organized visual cortical areas in the human brain (like their cou
71 he topography and functional organization of visual cortical areas in the human brain.
72                                              Visual cortical areas in the mammalian brain are linked
73 s useful to any laboratory wishing to target visual cortical areas in this increasingly valuable mode
74 ts can be found both in early and high-order visual cortical areas, in parallel with their stimulus t
75   This was not the case for any of the other visual cortical areas, including V1, although decoding w
76 onse profiles were similar in both motor and visual cortical areas, indicating that LC axons broadcas
77  responses in the postrhinal cortex (POR), a visual cortical area, instead depend on the tecto-thalam
78 ormation of visual-feature encoding in early visual cortical areas into more flexible categorical rep
79 lowing an error, activity increased in those visual cortical areas involved in processing task-releva
80 een object perception and neural activity in visual cortical areas is a problem of fundamental import
81 gher (motor or associative) areas in primate visual cortical areas is crucial for transforming sensor
82 but its role in modulating activity in early visual cortical areas is less well understood.
83 y unknown how visual information from higher visual cortical areas is translated into such a semantic
84 s of how communication, particularly between visual cortical areas, is instantiated and modulated, hi
85 e was strong motion opponency in a secondary visual cortical area known as the human MT complex (MT+)
86  we sought to determine whether higher order visual cortical areas lateromedial (LM), anterolateral (
87 dels suggests that visual responses in early visual cortical areas may be modulated by top-down influ
88     A candidate site for this integration is visual cortical area MT (V5), in which cells with large
89  neurons recorded with a single electrode in visual cortical area MT while monkeys performed a direct
90       Pontine cells that receive inputs from visual cortical areas or the superior colliculus respond
91  aspects of feedback circuitry from multiple visual cortical areas proceeds at a similar rate in all
92 vity) are distributed between prefrontal and visual cortical areas, respectively.
93     This control biased activity in multiple visual cortical areas, resulting in selective sensory pr
94                             Hearing cats and visual cortical areas served as a control.
95 duced by unilateral lesion of all contiguous visual cortical areas spanning occipital, parietal and t
96                                              Visual cortical areas subserve cognitive functions by in
97 m comparably transient responses recorded in visual cortical areas such as area MT, and represent the
98 ssion appears to be an intrinsic property of visual cortical areas such as inferior temporal cortex a
99 of the SC receive direct inputs from various visual cortical areas such as V1, V2, and middle tempora
100 he organization of amygdaloid projections to visual cortical areas TE and V1 by injecting anterograde
101 s not greatly depend on stimulus contrast in visual cortical areas tested [V1, V2, V3, and MT+ (middl
102 ural prediction accuracy in multiple ventral visual cortical areas that equals or exceeds that of mod
103 nate similar stimuli and are fully absent in visual cortical areas that feed into the hippocampus.
104 rapid dynamic interplay between auditory and visual cortical areas that is triggered by the second so
105 agnetic resonance imaging data revealed that visual cortical areas that selectively process relevant
106 we found that a well known "scene-selective" visual cortical area (the parahippocampal place area; PP
107  small-scale changes in projections from one visual cortical area, the posterior ectosylvian field (E
108 zone is additionally connected to nonprimary visual cortical areas, the aggressive face zone is not.
109 uperficial division is primarily linked with visual cortical areas, the amygdala, and the posterior t
110  examine the contribution of early and later visual cortical areas to dynamic shape integration.
111 ttentional filter acts in one or more higher visual cortical areas to restrict the availability of vi
112  monkeys to first measure the response in 12 visual cortical areas to stimuli of varying luminance co
113 tribution of higher-level versus lower-level visual cortical areas to this process.
114                  Thus, in the absence of all visual cortical areas unilaterally, disinhibition of the
115 ity of these circuits, we first mapped mouse visual cortical areas using intrinsic signal optical ima
116 col for mapping retinotopy to identify mouse visual cortical areas using ISI.
117 ties depends on neural activity available at visual cortical area V1.
118          Responses to subjective contours in visual cortical areas V1 and V2 in adult cats were inves
119                                           In visual cortical areas V1 and V2, the strongest response
120 li were present, some neurons in the macaque visual cortical areas V1 and V4 exhibited fluctuating fi
121 orrelated activity fluctuations across human visual cortical areas V1 through V4 to the dynamics (rat
122 at successive stages of the ventral pathway [visual cortical areas V1, V2, and V4 and inferior tempor
123 between their retinotopic representations in visual cortical areas V1, V2, and V4.
124 re evident for DF in the ventral portions of visual cortical areas V1, V2, V3, and hV4.
125 ation with spatial attention was observed in visual cortical areas V1-V4 for both tasks.
126 hin many regions of the visual system (e.g., visual cortical areas V1-V4v) not normally associated wi
127 f specialized completion mechanisms in early visual cortical areas (V1/V2), since those areas are lik
128 cepted account of the function of the second visual cortical area (V2), partly because no simple resp
129 tended retinotopic location were enhanced in visual cortical area V4 and throughout visual cortex.
130                         First, we identified visual cortical area V4 as one plausible contributor to
131              Past studies of shape coding in visual cortical area V4 have demonstrated that neurons c
132 l populations in prefrontal cortex (PFC) and visual cortical area V4 in rhesus macaque monkeys perfor
133 euronal responses from individual neurons in visual cortical area V4 to both single and paired stimul
134 ncing blood oxygen level-dependent signal in visual cortical area V4 when it is directed to three sti
135   We recorded from populations of neurons in visual cortical area V4 while two male rhesus macaque mo
136 d the local field potential (LFP) in primate visual cortical area V4.
137 red processing in two ventral stream stages (visual cortical areas V4 and IT) in the rhesus macaque m
138 ranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) applied to visual cortical area V5/MT to reduce the SNR focally and
139 lated modulation of activity occurs in other visual cortical areas, we recorded from individual neuro
140 r visual input drives the differentiation of visual cortical areas, we used two-photon calcium imagin
141 pathways and subsequently conveyed to higher visual cortical areas, where it could be integrated with
142     Our results suggest that damage to adult visual cortical areas, whether striate or extrastriate,
143 patially global feature enhancement in early visual-cortical areas, which is obligatory and persists
144 ry corresponds to the isolated activation of visual cortical areas with concurrent deactivation of "i
145 nance imaging (fMRI) to show that many human visual cortical areas, with the exception of VO, can dis

 
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