Perceptual Masking
-
Subject Areas on Research
- A biphasic effect of cross-modal priming on visual shape recognition.
- A new parameter in brain stem evoked response: component wave areas.
- Age similarities in the inertial properties of attention.
- Attentional markers of vulnerability to schizophrenia: performance of medicated and unmedicated patients and normals.
- Chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) conceal visual and auditory information from others.
- Contrast amplification in global texture orientation discrimination.
- Development of the Listening Self-Efficacy Questionnaire (LSEQ).
- EEG measures of brain activity reveal that smoking-related images capture the attention of smokers outside of awareness.
- Effects of spatial cuing on luminance detectability: psychophysical and electrophysiological evidence for early selection.
- Intelligibility in speech maskers with a binaural cochlear implant sound coding strategy inspired by the contralateral medial olivocochlear reflex.
- Investigation of the effects of temporal and spatial interactions on speech-recognition skills in cochlear-implant subjects.
- Neural correlates of the lombard effect in primate auditory cortex.
- Neural processing stages during object-substitution masking and their relationship to perceptual awareness.
- Not noisy, just wrong: the role of suboptimal inference in behavioral variability.
- Optical images of visible and invisible percepts in the primary visual cortex of primates.
- Parameter tuning of time-frequency masking algorithms for reverberant artifact removal within the cochlear implant stimulus.
- Psychophysical correlates of contralateral efferent suppression. I. The role of the medial olivocochlear system in "central masking" in nonhuman primates.
- Revisiting the backward masking deficit in schizophrenia: individual differences in performance and modeling with transcranial magnetic stimulation.
- Reward-associated features capture attention in the absence of awareness: Evidence from object-substitution masking.
- Sandwich masking eliminates both visual awareness of faces and face-specific brain activity through a feedforward mechanism.
- Signal-detection analysis of hemispheric differences in visual recognition memory.
- Stream segregation on a single electrode as a function of pulse rate in cochlear implant listeners.
- The effect of channel interactions on speech recognition in cochlear implant subjects: predictions from an acoustic model.
- The effects of reverberant self- and overlap-masking on speech recognition in cochlear implant listeners.
- The role of spatiotemporal edges in visibility and visual masking.
- Two- and four-year-olds learn to adapt referring expressions to context: effects of distracters and feedback on referential communication.
-
Keywords of People
- Woldorff, Marty G., Professor in Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke Science & Society