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The Publications of the Caplovitz Vision Lab

BOLD: Undergraduate student researcher

Although we were required to transfer the copyright of some of the articles to the publishers, we are allowed to distribute copies to individuals for personal and/or research use. Your click on any of the links below constitutes your request for a personal copy of the linked articles. A detailed copyright notice appears in the articles.



Caplovitz, G. P., & Tse, P. U. (2010). Extrastriate cortical activity reflects segmentation of motion into independent sources. Neuropsychologia, 48(9), 2699–2708. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2010.05.017


Kohler, P. J., Caplovitz, G. P., & Tse, P. U. (2009). The whole moves less than the spin of its parts. Attention, perception & psychophysics, 71(4), 675–679. https://doi.org/10.3758/APP.71.4.675


Caplovitz, G. P., & Kastner, S. (2009). Carrot sticks or joysticks: video games improve vision. Nature neuroscience, 12(5), 527–528. https://doi.org/10.1038/nn0509-527 PDF


Caplovitz, G. P., Paymer, N. A., & Tse, P. U. (2008). The Drifting Edge Illusion: a stationary edge abutting an oriented drifting grating appears to move because of the 'other aperture problem'. Vision research, 48(22), 2403–2414. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.visres.2008.07.014 PDF


Caplovitz, G. P., Fendrich, R., & Hughes, H. C. (2008). Failures to see: attentive blank stares revealed by change blindness. Consciousness and cognition, 17(3), 877–886. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.concog.2007.08.006


Caplovitz, G. P., Barroso, D. J., Hsieh, P. J., & Tse, P. U. (2008). fMRI reveals that non-local processing in ventral retinotopic cortex underlies perceptual grouping by temporal synchrony. Human brain mapping, 29(6), 651–661. https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.20429 PDF


Troncoso, X. G., Tse, P. U., Macknik, S. L., Caplovitz, G. P., Hsieh, P. J., Schlegel, A. A., Otero-Millan, J., & Martinez-Conde, S. (2007). BOLD activation varies parametrically with corner angle throughout human retinotopic cortex. Perception, 36(6), 808–820. https://doi.org/10.1068/p5610


Tse, P. U., & Caplovitz, G. P. (2006). Contour discontinuities subserve two types of form analysis that underlie motion processing. Progress in brain research, 154, 271–292. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0079-6123(06)54015-4


Caplovitz, G. P., & Tse, P. U. (2006). The bar-cross-ellipse illusion: alternating percepts of rigid and nonrigid motion based on contour ownership and trackable feature assignment. Perception, 35(7), 993–997. https://doi.org/10.1068/p5568


Caplovitz, G. P., & Tse, P. U. (2007). V3A processes contour curvature as a trackable feature for the perception of rotational motion. Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991), 17(5), 1179–1189. https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhl029


Jewett, D. L., Caplovitz, G., Baird, B., Trumpis, M., Olson, M. P., & Larson-Prior, L. J. (2004). The use of QSD (q-sequence deconvolution) to recover superposed, transient evoked-responses. Clinical neurophysiology : official journal of the International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology, 115(12), 2754–2775. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clinph.2004.06.014 PDF