A scientific dispute spanning six decades about fundamental mechanisms of visual perception in mammals has now been settled.
How does the brain perceive time? A new fMRI study identifies a three-stage neural relay from the visual cortex to the frontal regions that constructs our subjective experience of duration and timing.
How does the brain see the "big picture"? A new study reveals that the primary visual cortex (V1) calculates statistical ...
A tennis return can look almost automatic. The ball comes off the racket, crosses the court in a blur, and somehow a player ...
A scientific dispute spanning six decades about fundamental mechanisms of visual perception in mammals has now been settled.
When animals move through complex visual environments, the brain cannot afford to analyze every detail one by one. Instead, ...
How does Jannik Sinner manage to hit the ball at exactly the right moment, with remarkable precision? And how do we, in ...
Every illusion has a backstage crew. New research shows the brain’s own “puppet strings”—special neurons that quietly tug our perception—help us see edges and shapes that don’t actually exist. When ...
“Illusions are fun, but they are also a gateway to perception,” says Hyeyoung Shin, assistant professor of neuroscience at Seoul National University. Shin is the first author of a new study in Nature ...
To what extent has Earth’s gravity shaped our cognitive and brain functions? Utilizing spaceflight and a ground-based analog, a new study shows that the human brain relies on bodily gravitational ...
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