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Poster (74)
201.
Poster
The coding of colour, motion and their conjunction revisited using fMRI pattern classifier analysis. 14th Annual Meeting of the Organisation for Human Brain Mapping (HBM 2008), Melbourne, Australia (2008)
202.
Poster
Mapping responses to natural stimuli in the primate brain: visual flow, retinotopy and tonotopy. V Workshop of the International School on Magnetic Resonance and Brain Function (ISMRBF 2007), Erice, Italy (2007)
203.
Poster
Natural movie stimuli allow mapping of retinotopy and tonotopy in anesthetized monkey cortex. AREADNE 2006: Research in Encoding and Decoding of Neural Ensembles, Santorini, Greece (2006)
204.
Poster
Movie presentation allows mapping of retinotopy, color, and face-related activity in the anesthetized monkey brain. 35th Annual Meeting of the Society for Neuroscience (Neuroscience 2005), Washington, DC, USA (2005)
205.
Poster
Low-level visual features correlate with distinct cortical regions during natural viewing of a movie. 34th Annual Meeting of the Society for Neuroscience (Neuroscience 2004), San Diego, CA, USA (2004)
Working Paper (7)
206.
Working Paper
Separated and overlapping neural coding of face and body identity. (submitted)
207.
Working Paper
Disrupting short-term memory in premotor but not visual cortex affects serial dependence in visuomotor integration. (submitted)
208.
Working Paper
Magic, Bayes and wows: a Bayesian account of magic tricks. (submitted)
209.
Working Paper
Large-scale color biases in the retinotopic functional architecture are shared across human brains. (submitted)
210.
Working Paper
Laminar Responses to Visual Motion and Pursuit Integration in Human Areas V3A and V6 Measured Using 9.4T fMRI. (submitted)
211.
Working Paper
9.4T Human fMRI Study Reveals that Real World Motion Perception Does Not Involve Laminar Organization in V1 and V5/MT. (submitted)
212.
Working Paper
Objective (Real-world) Motion Responses in Scene Responsive Regions. (submitted)
Report (1)
213.
Report
185). Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, Tübingen, Germany (2009), 10 pp.
Semi-supervised subspace analysis of human functional magnetic resonance imaging data (Technical Report of the Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics,