A new eye tracking study reveals skilled musicians only read musical notes slightly faster than novices, but during that time, professional musicians are able to add flourish and play around with the music, interpreting it in their own manner.
Visual Neuroscience
Visual Neuroscience news articles cover science research into visual cortex, vision, visual disorders, blindness, brain processing of visual cues, facial recognition and research related to how eyes and brains function.
The way in which a patient is informed they have a specific eye disease can impact their psychological health and ability to deal with their condition in the long term.
Routine eye exams could help identify changes associated with cognitive decline in patients with type 1 diabetes.
When GABA targets are activated, visual processing for people on the autism spectrum becomes more like that of non-autistic people.
Researchers report signals from the retina are subjected to selective processing at the earliest neural way-station in the functional pathway connecting the retina to the visual cortex.
Researchers have developed a new ophthalmological device that can detect degenerative visual problems such as age-related macular degeneration long before the onset of the first symptoms.
Researchers have developed a low power chip for processing 3D camera data that could be used to help visually impaired people to navigate their environment.
Three simple, pre-programmed rules appear to help create the neural circuit connecting the fly's eye to its brain.
Being able to put a name to an object involves changing network interactions between different brain regions.
A new study investigates how the speed of our brain waves helps us process visual information.
People are oblivious to change when color is removed from peripheral vision. Research reports the brain likely fills in for much of our perceptual experience when it comes to seeing the entire picture in color.
A new study reports on the role of the frontal cortex in visual perception and how it can leave out objects in plain sight.