Julie D. Golomb American cognitive neuroscientist
Golomb, Julie D.
VIAF ID: 12158259475902302651 (Personal)
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/12158259475902302651
Preferred Forms
- 100 1 _ ‡a Golomb, Julie D
- 100 1 _ ‡a Golomb, Julie D.
- 100 0 _ ‡a Julie D. Golomb ‡c American cognitive neuroscientist
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (2)
Works
Title | Sources |
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Attention doesn't slide: spatiotopic updating after eye movements instantiates a new, discrete attentional locus | |
Attentional facilitation throughout human visual cortex lingers in retinotopic coordinates after eye movements. | |
Complementary attentional components of successful memory encoding | |
Differential patterns of 2D location versus depth decoding along the visual hierarchy. | |
Effects of adult aging on utilization of temporal and semantic associations during free and serial recall | |
Effects of stimulus variability and adult aging on adaptation to time-compressed speech. | |
Enhanced visual motion perception in major depressive disorder. | |
Eye movements help link different views in scene-selective cortex | |
Feature-binding errors after eye movements and shifts of attention | |
Feature-location binding in 3D: Feature judgments are biased by 2D location but not position-in-depth | |
Impaired consciousness in temporal lobe seizures: role of cortical slow activity | |
The influence of spatial location on same-different judgments of facial identity and expression | |
A Neural Basis of Facial Action Recognition in Humans | |
No Evidence for Automatic Remapping of Stimulus Features or Location Found with fMRI | |
Object-location binding across a saccade: A retinotopic spatial congruency bias. | |
Preservation of episodic visual recognition memory in aging. | |
Representations of spatial frequency, depth, and higher-level image content in human visual cortex, 2018: | |
Retinotopic memory is more precise than spatiotopic memory | |
Revisiting mixture models of memory | |
Spatial priming in ecologically relevant reference frames | |
A taxonomy of external and internal attention. |