New research reveals that numbers in our visual field can subtly distort how we judge spatial positions, showing that perception is shaped by both numerical magnitude and object-based processing.
Improvements in three-dimensional (3D) scanning have enabled quick and accurate scanning of 3D objects, including cultural heritage objects, as 3D point cloud data. However, conventional ...
Our motion perception is remarkably well tuned to detect small changes in speed and direction. For example, soccer goalkeepers need to precisely judge the speed, direction, and curvature of an ...
A group of international scientists published a paper on the journal Green Energy and Intelligent Transportation on October 19th, 2023, summarizing a comprehensive review of deep transfer learning for ...
Tasks and objects are the principal design artifacts in theworld of a real-time object-oriented (OO) software engineer.However, the two concepts and the principles that govern their useand design are ...
Isabel Gauthier receives funding from the National Science Foundation. Jason Chow does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from ...
Bisection tasks reveal biases due to spatial-numerical association. The presence of numbers in the object acts to affect ...
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