//
sign in
Profile
by @danabra.mov
Profile
by @dansshadow.bsky.social
Profile
by @jimpick.com
AviHandle
by @danabra.mov
AviHandle
by @dansshadow.bsky.social
AviHandle
by @katherine.computer
EventsList
by @katherine.computer
ProfileHeader
by @dansshadow.bsky.social
ProfileHeader
by @danabra.mov
ProfileMedia
by @danabra.mov
ProfilePlays
by @danabra.mov
ProfilePosts
by @danabra.mov
ProfilePosts
by @dansshadow.bsky.social
ProfileReplies
by @danabra.mov
Record
by @atsui.org
Skircle
by @danabra.mov
StreamPlacePlaylist
by @katherine.computer
+ new component
Profile
Loading...





Loading...
馃毃New dataset just dropped馃毃 Introducing Places in the Wild: 67,000 RAW-format photographs (45 mpix) densely sampled from 810 places (260 basic-level categories). This is 11x the number of pixels in ImageNet! Preprint is here: arxiv.org/abs/2606.02481 1/
This was a fun collaboration with a great team, and I was happy to play a small part in it!
8d
15d
Now out in Nature Neuroscience: "Fixation duration on natural scenes is explained by memory encoding not processing demand". www.nature.com/articles/s41... Our eyes don't linger because recognition is hard; they linger to remember. Let me take you on a quick tour. 馃У
Our multiverse analysis of associations between skin conductance and acute pain is published! >550 participants x 18 SCR pipelines = 1 winning approach to SCR analysis! (Ledalab + artifact detection). thread below. We hope others find this useful! Please RT :) journals.lww.com/pain/fulltex...
15d
Large image datasets have accelerated progress in cognitive neuroscience and computer vision. However, most datasets are low-resolution, internet-sourced JPEGs with unknown capture conditions and limi...
arxiv.org
Places in the Wild: A Large, High-Resolution RAW Photograph Dataset for Ecologically Valid Vision Research
21d
Martin Hebart
Michelle Greene
Researchers explore how the brain makes sense of ambiguous images. Even when an image is unclear or incomplete, we often end up recognizing what we are seeing 馃У馃憞 @martinhebart.bsky.social @lindedomingo.bsky.social @ortiztudela.bsky.social @gonzalezgarcia.bsky.social @jvoeller.bsky.social
By combining magnetoencephalography and eye tracking, this study sheds light on why people fixate on some parts of natural scenes longer than others. Rather than visual complexity, fixation durations ...
www.nature.com
Fixation duration on natural scenes is explained by memory encoding not processing demand - Nature Neuroscience
2d
Looks like geons are alive and well: this paper was rated among the top 1.8% of all papers at CVPR: bardofcodes.github.io/superfit/
Philip Sulewski
9d
Lauren Atlas
Mind, Brain and Behavior Research Center - CIMCYC
Now out in Nature Neuroscience: "Fixation duration on natural scenes is explained by memory encoding not processing demand". www.nature.com/articles/s41... Our eyes don't linger because recognition is hard; they linger to remember. Let me take you on a quick tour. 馃У
Martin Hebart
15d
By combining magnetoencephalography and eye tracking, this study sheds light on why people fixate on some parts of natural scenes longer than others. Rather than visual complexity, fixation durations ...
www.nature.com
Fixation duration on natural scenes is explained by memory encoding not processing demand - Nature Neuroscience
Philip Sulewski
I am so excited to share our newest preprint, inspired by @tinalonsdorf.bsky.social, 鈥淎 multiverse approach to heat-evoked skin conductance analysis: Evaluating the influence of analytic pipeline on associations between skin conductance and pain osf.io/preprints/ps...
5mo
Investigadores/as del Centro de Investigaci贸n Mente, Cerebro y Comportamiento (CIMCYC) de la Universidad de Granada, en colaboraci贸n con Martin N. Hebart (Justus Liebig University Giessen y el Max Pla...
cimcyc.ugr.es
How Does the Brain Resolve Ambiguous Images?
Lauren Atlas
OSF
osf.io