•  127
    Asymmetrical color filling-in from the nasal to the temporal side of the blind spot
    with Hui Li, Junxiang Luo, Yiliang Lu, Janis Kan, and Wei Wang
    Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8. 2014.
  •  3
    Gestalt Issues in Modern Neuroscience
    with Viktor Sarris and Walter H. Ehrenstein
    Global Philosophy 13 (3-4): 433-458. 2003.
    We present select examples of how visual phenomena can serve as tools to uncoverbrain mechanisms. Specifically, receptive field organization is proposed as a Gestalt-like neural mechanism of perceptual organization. Appropriate phenomena, such as brightness and orientation contrast, subjective contours, filling-in, and aperture-viewed motion, allow for a quantitative comparison between receptive fields and their psychophysical counterparts, perceptive fields. Phenomenology might thus be extended…Read more
  •  96
    How do we see what is not there?
    with John S. Werner
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 21 (6): 773-774. 1998.
    Pessoa et al. provide a valuable taxonomy of perceptual completion phenomena, but it is not yet clear whether these phenomena are mediated by one kind of neural mechanism or more. We suggest three possible neural mechanisms of long-range interaction to stimulate further perceptual and neurophysiological investigation of perceptual completion and filling-in.
  •  1255
    Beyond the classic receptive field: the effect of contextual stimuli
    with Birgitta Dresp-Langley and Chia-Huei Tseng
    Journal of Vision 15 1-22. 2015.
    Following the pioneering studies of the receptive field (RF), the concept gained further significance for visual perception by the discovery of input effects from beyond the classical RF. These studies demonstrated that neuronal responses could be modulated by stimuli outside their RFs, consistent with the perception of induced brightness, color, orientation, and motion. Lesion scotomata are similarly modulated perceptually from the surround by RFs that have migrated from the interior to the out…Read more
  •  275
    Gestalt issues in modern neuroscience
    with Walter H. Ehrenstein and Viktor Sarris
    Axiomathes 13 (3): 433-458. 2003.
    We present select examples of how visual phenomena can serve as tools to uncoverbrain mechanisms. Specifically, receptive field organization is proposed as a Gestalt-like neural mechanism of perceptual organization. Appropriate phenomena, such as brightness and orientation contrast, subjective contours, filling-in, and aperture-viewed motion, allow for a quantitative comparison between receptive fields and their psychophysical counterparts, perceptive fields. Phenomenology might thus be extended…Read more
  •  50
    Peter H. Schiller (1931-2023) – Eminent neuroscientist
    Gestalt Theory 45 (3): 331-337. 2023.
  •  36
    Glimpses from the Past: Michael Wertheimer dead at 95
    Gestalt Theory 45 (1-2): 13-15. 2023.
  •  61
    Richard Marx Held (1922–2016)
    Gestalt Theory 39 (1): 90-97. 2017.
  •  9
    Flashing anomalous color contrast
    with B. Pinna and J. S. Werner
    A new visual phenomenon that we call flashing anomalous color contrast is described. This phenomenon arises from the interaction between a gray central disk and a chromatic annulus surrounded by black radial lines. In an array of such figures, the central gray disk no longer appears gray, but assumes a color complementary to that of the surrounding annulus. The induced color appears: vivid and saturated; self-luminous, not a surface property; flashing with eye or stimulus movement; floating out …Read more
  •  2386
    The major theoretical framework relative to the perception of illusory figures is reviewed and discussed in the attempt to provide a unifying explanatory account for these phenomena