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Influence of encoding difficulty, word frequency, and phonological regularity on age differences in word naming.
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The impact of bilingualism on the narrative ability and the executive functions of children with autism spectrum disorders. ...
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Multimodal semantic revision during inferential processing: The role of inhibitory control in text and picture comprehension. ...
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Multimodal semantic revision during inferential processing: The role of inhibitory control in text and picture comprehension.
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Maternal discourse continuity and infants' actions organize 12-month-olds' language exposure during object play.
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In: Developmental science, vol 22, iss 3 (2019)
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Remapping the cognitive and neural profiles of children who struggle at school. ...
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Spontaneous cognition in dysphoria: reduced positive bias in imagining the future. ...
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Discourse Process Training and Attention Process Training 2 in Adults with Traumatic Brain Injury
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Bilingualism and language similarity modify the neural mechanisms of selective attention. ...
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Assessing and mapping language, attention and executive multidimensional deficits in stroke aphasia. ...
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Spontaneous cognition in dysphoria: reduced positive bias in imagining the future.
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Bilingualism and language similarity modify the neural mechanisms of selective attention.
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Assessing and mapping language, attention and executive multidimensional deficits in stroke aphasia.
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Remapping the cognitive and neural profiles of children who struggle at school.
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Why do children pay more attention to grammatical morphemes at the ends of sentences?
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In: Journal of child language, vol 45, iss 3 (2018)
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Eye movements provide insight into individual differences in children's analogical reasoning strategies.
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Meaning Guides Attention during Real-World Scene Description.
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In: Scientific reports, vol 8, iss 1 (2018)
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Energization and spoken language production: evidence from progressive supranuclear palsy
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The center of attention: Metamers, sensitivity, and bias in the emergent perception of gaze.
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In: Vision research, vol 131 (2017)
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Abstract:
A person's gaze reveals much about their focus of attention and intentions. Sensitive perception of gaze is thus highly relevant for social interaction, especially when it is directed toward the viewer. Yet observers also tend to overestimate the likelihood that gaze is directed toward them. How might the visual system balance these competing goals, maximizing sensitivity for discriminating gazes that are relatively direct, while at the same time allowing many gazes to appear as if they look toward the viewer? Perceiving gaze is an emergent visual process that involves integrating information from the eyes with the rotation of the head. Here, we examined whether the visual system leverages emergent representation to balance these competing goals. We measured perceived gaze for a large range of pupil and head combinations and found that head rotation has a nonlinear influence on a person's apparent direction of looking, especially when pupil rotations are relatively direct. These perceptual distortions could serve to expand representational space and thereby enhance discriminability of gazes that are relatively direct. We also found that the emergent perception of gaze supports an abundance of direct gaze metamers-different combinations of head and pupil rotations that combine to generate the appearance of gaze directed toward the observer. Our results thus demonstrate a way in which the visual system flexibly integrates information from facial features to optimize social perception. Many gazes can be made to look toward you, yet similar gazes need not appear alike.
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Keyword:
Adult; Attention; Categorical perception; Emergent; Experimental Psychology; Eye Movements; Eyes; Face perception; Facial Recognition; Female; Fixation; Gaze perception; Humans; Male; Medical and Health Sciences; Ocular; Optical Phenomena; Pattern Recognition; Photic Stimulation; Psychology and Cognitive Sciences; Sensitivity and Specificity; Social Perception; Visual; Visual Perception
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URL: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/14c256sp
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You talkin' to me? Communicative talker gaze activates left-lateralized superior temporal cortex during perception of degraded speech. ...
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