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Professor Robert Kentridge's Outputs (4)

Direct encoding of orientation variance in the visual system (2015)
Journal Article
Norman, L., Heywood, C., & Kentridge, R. (2015). Direct encoding of orientation variance in the visual system. Journal of Vision, 15(4), 1-14. https://doi.org/10.1167/15.4.3

Our perception of regional irregularity, an example of which is orientation variance, seems effortless when we view two patches of texture that differ in this attribute. Little is understood, however, of how the visual system encodes a regional stati... Read More about Direct encoding of orientation variance in the visual system.

Exogenous attention to unseen objects? (2015)
Journal Article
Norman, L., Heywood, C., & Kentridge, R. (2015). Exogenous attention to unseen objects?. Consciousness and Cognition, 35, 319-329. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.concog.2015.02.015

Attention and awareness are closely related phenomena, but recent evidence has shown that not all attended stimuli give rise to awareness. Controversy still remains over whether, and the extent to which, a dissociation between attention and awareness... Read More about Exogenous attention to unseen objects?.

Change Blindness (2015)
Book Chapter
Kentridge, R. (2015). Change Blindness. In J. Wright (Ed.), International encyclopedia of social and behavioral sciences (344-349). (2nd ed.). Elsevier. https://doi.org/10.1016/b978-0-08-097086-8.51024-1

Change blindness is a phenomenon in which major changes to a visual scene go unnoticed. There are many methods of inducing change blindness, for example, by presenting a blank image between presentation of the original and changed pictures. Change bl... Read More about Change Blindness.

Type-2 Blindsight: Empirical and Philosophical Perspectives (2015)
Journal Article
Foley, R., & Kentridge, R. (2015). Type-2 Blindsight: Empirical and Philosophical Perspectives. Consciousness and Cognition, 32, 1-5. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.concog.2015.01.008

The articles in this special issue on type-2 blindsight all arose from a three-day workshop at University College Dublin in May 2013. The project brought together empirical researchers and philosophers to address the often-overlooked issue of residua... Read More about Type-2 Blindsight: Empirical and Philosophical Perspectives.