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Science 8 January 1982:
Vol. 215. no. 4529, pp. 192 - 194
DOI: 10.1126/science.7053571

Articles

Science, Vol 215, Issue 4529, 192-194
Copyright © 1982 by American Association for the Advancement of Science


articles

Integrating visual information from successive fixations

J Jonides, DE Irwin, and S Yantis

One of the classic problems in perception is how visual information from successive fixations of a scene is integrated to form a coherent view of the scene. The results of this experiment implicate a process that integrates by summing information from successive fixations after spatially reconciling the information from each glimpse. The output of this process is a memory image that preserves the properly reconciled information from successive fixations.


THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
Correlates of transsaccadic integration in the primary visual cortex of the monkey.
P. S. Khayat, H. Spekreijse, and P. R. Roelfsema (2004)
PNAS 101, 12712-12717
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