Poster Sessions

Sunday Morning Posters, Banyan Breezeway and Pavilion

Poster Session: Sunday, May 19, 2024, 8:30 am – 12:30 pm, Banyan Breezeway and Pavilion

Abstract#

Poster Title

First Author

Session

Room

33.442

Spatial Attention Appears Modulated by Behaviourally Relevant Contexts

Britt, Noah

Attention: Spatial selection 2

Pavilion

33.344

Generalization of implied motion to real motion in infancy

Umekawa, Riku

Development: Natural experience and eye movements

Banyan Breezeway

33.301

Variation in cortical responses to neuromodulation: Motor thresholds vs. Visual phosphenes

Cohan, Remy

Plasticity and Learning: Electrophysiology, brain stimulation

Banyan Breezeway

33.431

Competition shapes spatial coding strategy for selective attention inside visual working memory: insights from gaze and neural measurements

Liu, Baiwei

Attention: Spatial selection 1

Pavilion

33.422

Please ignore this title. Searching for evidence of effective active suppression using a dot filtering task

Rodriguez, Andrew

Attention: Features, objects 2

Pavilion

33.452

A virtual target controls fixation better than a remembered target

Watamaniuk, Scott

Eye Movements: Fixational eye movements

Pavilion

33.306

Deriving the functional form to fit confidence ratings in psychophysical experiments

Schneider, Keith A.

Decision Making: Perceptual decision making 2

Banyan Breezeway

33.317

Indexing Sensory Eye Dominance

Zheng, Qingzi

Binocular Vision: Eye dominance and rivalry

Banyan Breezeway

33.414

Flexible allocation of feature-based attention to narrow and broad ranges of colors as assessed by steady-state visual evoked potentials

Ozkan, Mert

Attention: Features, objects 1

Pavilion

33.401

Behavioral detectability of electrical stimulation of inferior temporal neurons is easier in the presence of their preferred visual stimuli

Azadi, Reza

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

Pavilion

33.326

Psychophysical measure of the impact of healthy aging on rods and cones of the retina

Rodrigue, Geneviève

Color, Light and Materials: Neural mechanisms, models, disorders

Banyan Breezeway

33.318

Variances in sensory eye dominance across the visual field

Kam, Ka Yee

Binocular Vision: Eye dominance and rivalry

Banyan Breezeway

33.423

The time course of activating, maintaining, and switching between attentional templates in visual search

Eimer, Martin

Attention: Features, objects 2

Pavilion

33.453

Enhancements and impairments in visual discrimination of different spatial frequencies before the onset of spontaneous microsaccades

Stearns, Zoe

Eye Movements: Fixational eye movements

Pavilion

33.327

Signals from S-cone-driven Single-Opponent Neurons in the Human Visual Cortex

Qiao, Songlin

Color, Light and Materials: Neural mechanisms, models, disorders

Banyan Breezeway

33.302

Nap after anodal transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) disrupts consolidation of visual perceptual learning- an EEG study

Zhu, Xinyi

Plasticity and Learning: Electrophysiology, brain stimulation

Banyan Breezeway

33.432

Preliminary Analysis of the Contrast Response Function and its Modulation by Spatial Attention Using Magnetoencephalography

Sklar, Alfredo

Attention: Spatial selection 1

Pavilion

33.345

The development of Internal noise

Silvestre, Daphné

Development: Natural experience and eye movements

Banyan Breezeway

33.415

Looking for the red shirt: Meaningful objects strengthen memory and attentional guidance

Chung, Yong Hoon

Attention: Features, objects 1

Pavilion

33.402

Network mechanisms of ongoing brain activity’s influence on conscious visual perception

Wu, Yuan-hao

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

Pavilion

33.307

Dissecting the Reaction Times of Global and Local Processing

lougen, daniel

Decision Making: Perceptual decision making 2

Banyan Breezeway

33.443

Semantically related objects act as spatial predictors during visual search

Souza-Wiggins, Makayla

Attention: Spatial selection 2

Pavilion

33.424

Is Attention Gone With the Wind: Does motion without context cue visuospatial attention?

Telschow, Genna

Attention: Features, objects 2

Pavilion

33.319

Assessing variations in eye dominance across the visual field

Paffen, Chris

Binocular Vision: Eye dominance and rivalry

Banyan Breezeway

33.454

How do pupillary light responses and microsaccades allude to voluntary and involuntary auditory attention?

Liao, Hsin-I

Eye Movements: Fixational eye movements

Pavilion

33.303

Stronger adaptation of middle-to-late ERP components to object silhouette images before versus after object priming in Aphantasia

SINGTOKUM, NITHIT

Plasticity and Learning: Electrophysiology, brain stimulation

Banyan Breezeway

33.433

Unravelling the interplay of Statistical Learning, Top-Down, and Bottom-Up Mechanisms during target selection: Insights from Behavioural and EEG Experiments

Dolci, Carola

Attention: Spatial selection 1

Pavilion

33.346

Characterizing the statistics of naturalistic visual experience during head-free fixations in infancy

Petroff, Zachary

Development: Natural experience and eye movements

Banyan Breezeway

33.328

Alternating orientation of the chromatic pattern visual evoked potential improves signal, even in the absence of contrast adaptation.

Ara, Jawshan

Color, Light and Materials: Neural mechanisms, models, disorders

Banyan Breezeway

33.403

Conservation of cortical crowding distance in human V4: A replication and extension

Kurzawski, Jan W.

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

Pavilion

33.308

Inhomogeneities in human responses to zero-coherence dot motion persist as increasingly more sensory evidence is added

Jongmekwamsuk, Kanathip

Decision Making: Perceptual decision making 2

Banyan Breezeway

33.416

On the relationship between target-distractor discriminability and search efficiency: the case of color.

Lleras, Alejandro

Attention: Features, objects 1

Pavilion

33.444

Modeling attentional deployment in an immersive environment using a foraging task in VR

Callahan-Flintoft, Chloe

Attention: Spatial selection 2

Pavilion

33.309

Metacognition in Putative Magno- and Parvocellular Vision

Nukala, Vrishab

Decision Making: Perceptual decision making 2

Banyan Breezeway

33.445

The Role of Statistical Learning in Attentional Guidance During Search Through Naturalistic Scenes

Frandsen, Justin

Attention: Spatial selection 2

Pavilion

33.425

Eye-tracking reveals robust attentional filtering in an object-based attention task

Pidaparthi, Lasyapriya

Attention: Features, objects 2

Pavilion

33.320

Intermittent theta burst stimulation (iTBS) of primary visual cortex reduces sensory eye dominance.

Wang, Junyu

Binocular Vision: Eye dominance and rivalry

Banyan Breezeway

33.347

Infants’ use of eye movements to explore their natural environment

Candy, T Rowan

Development: Natural experience and eye movements

Banyan Breezeway

33.434

Allocation of spatial attention in human visual cortex as a function of endogenous cue validity

Narhi-Martinez, William

Attention: Spatial selection 1

Pavilion

33.455

Involuntary Eye-Movement Signatures Differ for Recognition of Oneself, Familiar and Unfamiliar Faces

Schwetlick, Lisa

Eye Movements: Fixational eye movements

Pavilion

33.404

Diverse visual feature selectivity is enabled through inhibitory feature surrounds in deep neural network models

Hamblin, Christopher

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

Pavilion

33.417

Attention increases representational distance near task-relevant orientations

Allouche, Melissa

Attention: Features, objects 1

Pavilion

33.329

Chromatic center-surround antagonism revealed by the Westheimer paradigm

Wu, Christopher S

Color, Light and Materials: Neural mechanisms, models, disorders

Banyan Breezeway

33.304

EEG measures of consolidation of visual perceptual learning during wakefulness are distinct from consolidation during sleep

Cochrane, Aaron

Plasticity and Learning: Electrophysiology, brain stimulation

Banyan Breezeway

33.405

Disentangling the unique contribution of human retinotopic regions using neural control

Gifford, Alessandro T.

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

Pavilion

33.310

Metacognition is mentally demanding: revealing the costs and consequences of metacognitive effort

Matthews, Julian

Decision Making: Perceptual decision making 2

Banyan Breezeway

33.305

LTP-like activity induced by post-training rhythmic flicker consolidates visual perceptual learning

Yang, Xin-Yue

Plasticity and Learning: Electrophysiology, brain stimulation

Banyan Breezeway

33.330

Consequences of fixational eye movements for chromatic sensitivity

Neverodska, Alina

Color, Light and Materials: Neural mechanisms, models, disorders

Banyan Breezeway

33.456

Spatial Dynamics of Microsaccades: Investigating the Influence of Fixational Proximity to Visual Stimuli on Saccade-Induced EEG Modulation

Turner, Christopher

Eye Movements: Fixational eye movements

Pavilion

33.446

The Dynamic Nature of Memory-Guided Attention

Lancry-Dayan, Oryah

Attention: Spatial selection 2

Pavilion

33.321

Altering sensory eye dominance using monocular deprivation: Does the eye deprived or task matter?

Qian, Chenyi

Binocular Vision: Eye dominance and rivalry

Banyan Breezeway

33.435

The impact of predicted and unpredicted events on the spatial priority map: evidence from multivariate pattern analyses in EEG

de Waard, Jasper

Attention: Spatial selection 1

Pavilion

33.348

Locomotion through surprising environments: Age effects on gaze guidance and object memory

Meißner, Sophie

Development: Natural experience and eye movements

Banyan Breezeway

33.426

fMRI reveals a modulatory role of visual field meridians on object-based selective attention

Hughes, David H.

Attention: Features, objects 2

Pavilion

33.418

Object-based attention is flexible to both low- and high-level changes in real-world objects.

McEvoy, Kelly

Attention: Features, objects 1

Pavilion

33.447

General and specific effects of meditation on gaze cueing of attention

Falikman, Maria

Attention: Spatial selection 2

Pavilion

33.322

Short-term monocular deprivation biases the location of the visual egocentre

Ba, Yalige

Binocular Vision: Eye dominance and rivalry

Banyan Breezeway

33.427

Does selective attention utilize physical feature values or perceptual interpretations?

Khvostov, Vladislav

Attention: Features, objects 2

Pavilion

33.457

Temporal attention and expectation jointly modulate microsaccades

Duyar, Aysun

Eye Movements: Fixational eye movements

Pavilion

33.331

Parvo versus magno isoluminance

Sperling, George

Color, Light and Materials: Neural mechanisms, models, disorders

Banyan Breezeway

33.407

Testing the Possible Origins of Category Selectivity in the Brain with DNN Models

Zheng, Bowen

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

Pavilion

33.349

The post-stimulus modulation of the saccade rate reflects inhibitory control and top-down exploration in young and aging populations

Shdeour, Orit

Development: Natural experience and eye movements

Banyan Breezeway

33.311

Near-optimal metacognition across the visual periphery

Odegaard, Brian

Decision Making: Perceptual decision making 2

Banyan Breezeway

33.436

Effects of head gaze and body position on attention in real-world scenes.

Gottesman, Carmela

Attention: Spatial selection 1

Pavilion

33.419

Semantic relationships between sounds and images modulate attention even when the stimuli are task-irrelevant

Wegner-Clemens, Kira

Attention: Features, objects 1

Pavilion

33.332

Mechanism of positive color afterimage caused by dichoptical presented contours

Yang, Tan-Ni

Color, Light and Materials: Neural mechanisms, models, disorders

Banyan Breezeway

33.458

Time course of microsaccades directionality during an endogenous attention task

Brandolani, Riccardo

Eye Movements: Fixational eye movements

Pavilion

33.437

Individual differences in eye movements and perceptual averaging

Hayward, William G.

Attention: Spatial selection 1

Pavilion

33.323

Homeostatic and Hebbian plasticity are related in adult humans

Prosper, Antoine

Binocular Vision: Eye dominance and rivalry

Banyan Breezeway

33.420

Feature Selectivity in the Far Periphery

Bidiwala, Ema

Attention: Features, objects 1

Pavilion

33.428

Scan pattern similarity predicts the semantic similarity of sentences across languages above and beyond their syntactic structures.

Coco, Moreno I.

Attention: Features, objects 2

Pavilion

33.408

Reliability of functional localization and activation profiles of category-selective regions using fMRI

Cheung, Olivia S.

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

Pavilion

33.448

Large-scale examination of the benefit and cost of spatial attention and their variability

Yeshurun, Yaffa

Attention: Spatial selection 2

Pavilion

33.350

Modulation of saccade-rate in infants during their first year of life

Yuval-Greenberg, Shlomit

Development: Natural experience and eye movements

Banyan Breezeway

33.312

The effects of spatiotemporal uncertainty on metacognition in orientation ensemble perception

Lee, Alan L. F.

Decision Making: Perceptual decision making 2

Banyan Breezeway

33.438

The influence of attention on visual asymmetries in the foveola

Jenks, Samantha K.

Attention: Spatial selection 1

Pavilion

33.333

A Recipe for a 4+ Primaries DLP Projector

Fraser, Lindsey

Color, Light and Materials: Neural mechanisms, models, disorders

Banyan Breezeway

33.324

Transcranial magnetic stimulation to early visual cortex modulates binocular rivalry

Moro, Stefania S.

Binocular Vision: Eye dominance and rivalry

Banyan Breezeway

33.459

The relationship between the decline in cone density and acuity assessed in normal viewing conditions across the central fovea

Clark, Ashley M.

Eye Movements: Fixational eye movements

Pavilion

33.313

Treating logical fallacies in a normative computational framework of perceptual decision making

Molnár, Barnabás

Decision Making: Perceptual decision making 2

Banyan Breezeway

33.351

Developmental trajectory of gaze during natural locomotion

Schroer, Sara

Development: Natural experience and eye movements

Banyan Breezeway

33.429

Divided Attention in American Sign Language Processing

Young, Dave

Attention: Features, objects 2

Pavilion

33.421

Decoding Feature-Based Attention in Visual Cortex

Faherty, Rylee

Attention: Features, objects 1

Pavilion

33.409

Behavioral detectability of optogenetic stimulation of inferotemporal cortex predicts the magnitude of stimulation-induced perceptual events

Shahbazi, Elia

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

Pavilion

33.449

An Attentional Serial Reaction Time Task

Duffy, Margaret L.

Attention: Spatial selection 2

Pavilion

33.325

Visual Uncertainty in Binocular Rivalry

zhou, Zhangziyi

Binocular Vision: Eye dominance and rivalry

Banyan Breezeway

33.430

Automated Symbolic Orienting Revisited: Do Words Elicit the Same Effect?

Weidler, Blaire J

Attention: Features, objects 2

Pavilion

33.460

Ultra-fine knowledge of gaze position in saccade planning

Li, Yuanhao Howard

Eye Movements: Fixational eye movements

Pavilion

33.439

Fine-tuning exogenous attention at the foveal scale: effects on different spatial frequencies

Guzhang, Yue

Attention: Spatial selection 1

Pavilion

33.450

Influence of aging on visual attention and peripheral perception

Laurin, Anne-Sophie

Attention: Spatial selection 2

Pavilion

33.410

Object size and depth representations in human visual cortex

Ran, Mengxin

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

Pavilion

33.314

When does response duration track performance?

Zhou, Hanbei

Decision Making: Perceptual decision making 2

Banyan Breezeway

33.334

Biomimetic-inspired resilient learning: Impact of progressive chromatic variations on the face recognition performance

Munshi, Joydeep

Color, Light and Materials: Neural mechanisms, models, disorders

Banyan Breezeway

33.315

Mapping visual search errors to covert operations with frontal eye field neurophysiology and double factorial design

Lyu, Wanyi

Decision Making: Perceptual decision making 2

Banyan Breezeway

33.440

Pupil size during visual search: A measure of the spatial extent of attention

Mueller, Emma

Attention: Spatial selection 1

Pavilion

33.451

Preparations to break the Tyranny of Film: Designing stimuli that change comprehension and moment-to-moment content importance in video

Chandran, Prasanth

Attention: Spatial selection 2

Pavilion

33.335

Deep learning models for lightness constancy can exploit both natural lighting cues and rendering artifacts.

Flachot, Alban

Color, Light and Materials: Neural mechanisms, models, disorders

Banyan Breezeway

33.411

Cortical dynamics of material and shape perception across illumination and viewpoint

Schmid, Alexandra C.

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

Pavilion

33.316

Metacognitive control drives behavioural efficiency in dynamic sensory environments

Balsdon, Tarryn

Decision Making: Perceptual decision making 2

Banyan Breezeway

33.441

The efficiency of visual processing adapts to the "vigor" of eye movements: From what breaks through into awareness to the speed of meaning extraction

Ongchoco, Joan Danielle K.

Attention: Spatial selection 1

Pavilion

33.412

Reassessing the Food Selective Component in Human Visual Cortex

Fang, Cyn

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

Pavilion

33.336

Unveiling the temporal dynamics of diurnal and crepuscular illumination

Yu, Cehao

Color, Light and Materials: Neural mechanisms, models, disorders

Banyan Breezeway

33.413

Aging delays the formation of object representations

Haupt, Marleen

Object Recognition: Neural mechanisms

Pavilion

33.337

Image statistics of melanopsin-mediated signals

Barrionuevo, Pablo

Color, Light and Materials: Neural mechanisms, models, disorders

Banyan Breezeway

33.338

Effect or artifact? Assessing the stability of comparison-based scales

Künstle, David-Elias

Color, Light and Materials: Neural mechanisms, models, disorders

Banyan Breezeway

33.339

Color categories in color anomalous trichromats and dichromats

Martin, Aimee

Color, Light and Materials: Neural mechanisms, models, disorders

Banyan Breezeway

33.340

Evaluation of novel tablet-based color vision tests

Arthur, Christabel

Color, Light and Materials: Neural mechanisms, models, disorders

Banyan Breezeway

33.341

Alterations in resting-state functional connectivity in Charles Bonnet Syndrome

Kinakool, Aysha N.

Color, Light and Materials: Neural mechanisms, models, disorders

Banyan Breezeway

33.342

Synesthetic Color Mapping of Chinese Characters and Kanji: Comparative Analysis among Grapheme-Color Synesthetes in Taiwan and Japan

Yang, Chien-Chun

Color, Light and Materials: Neural mechanisms, models, disorders

Banyan Breezeway

33.343

A blue-light absorbing lens improves visual function under bright light conditions in pseudophakic patients

Harth, Jacob B.

Color, Light and Materials: Neural mechanisms, models, disorders

Banyan Breezeway

Undergraduate Just-In-Time Poster Submissions

VSS 2024 is pleased to announce that the “Just-In-Time” poster sessions for undergraduate students working on independent research projects are now open for submissions. Posters will be presented in person at the annual meeting in one of two sessions, either Saturday, May 18 or Monday, May 20.

VSS welcomes and encourages submissions from a diverse group of eligible students across the globe. To help accomplish this goal we are asking that you share this information with any programs within your institutions that sponsor or promote research for undergraduate students.

Eligibility

The submissions to these sessions are limited to students who:

  • Are currently enrolled in a 3-year or 4-year program leading to the bachelor’s degree. Or,
  • Have earned a bachelor’s degree in a 3-year program and are currently in their first year of study in a program leading to a master’s degree. (Students studying in European universities may fall into this category). Those who already have an abstract accepted for VSS 2024 are not eligible.

Space is limited. The window for submissions will open on March 1 and submissions will be accepted through April 1. Presenters will be informed of acceptance by April 11.

You must be a current student member (for 2024) to submit an abstract.

A limited number of travel grants are available for undergraduate students who submit abstracts during the Just-in-Time submission period. Travel application information will be available upon submission of the student’s abstract.

VSS welcomes and encourages submissions from a diverse group of eligible students across the globe. To help accomplish this goal we are asking that you share this information with any programs within your institutions that sponsor or promote research for undergraduate students. For details and to submit an abstract, go to Undergraduate Just-In-time Poster Submission Guidelines.

Submission Policies

  • A student may submit only one abstract to the Just-In-Time session.
  • The student must be a current VSS member (for 2024).
  • The student must be registered to attend VSS.
  • Those who already have an abstract accepted for VSS 2024 are not eligible to submit to the Just-In-Time session.
  • Abstracts must be work that has not been accepted for publication or published at the time of submission.
  • Poster presenter substitutions are not permitted.

Abstract Format

Abstracts are limited to 300 words. This does not include title, authors, and affiliations. Additional space is provided for funding acknowledgments and for declaration of commercial interests and conflicts.

Your abstract should consist of an introduction, methods and results sections, and a conclusion. It is not required that the sections be explicitly labeled as such. It is, however, important that each abstract contains sufficiently detailed descriptions of the methods and the results. Please do not submit an abstract of work that you are planning to do or work without sufficient results to reach a clear conclusion. Such abstracts will not be accepted.

Per the VSS Disclosure of Conflict of Interest Policy, authors must reveal any commercial interests or other potential conflicts of interest that they have related to the work described. Any conflicts of interest must be declared on your poster or talk slides.

Please complete your submission carefully. All abstracts must be in final form. Abstracts are not proofread or corrected in any way prior to publication. Typos and other errors cannot be corrected after the deadline. You may edit your abstract as much as you like until the submission deadline.

Given the just-in-time deadline, some aspects will differ from regular VSS submissions. Submissions will be reviewed by members of the VSS Board of Directors and designates. Accepted abstracts will appear in the VSS 2024 program, but unlike submissions accepted following the December review, “Just-In-Time” abstracts will not appear in the Journal of Vision.

If you have any questions, please contact our office at .

Submission Schedule

Submissions Open: March 1, 2024
Submissions Close: April 1, 2024
Undergraduate Travel Award Application Deadline: April 5, 2024
Notification of Accepted Abstracts: April 11, 2024

How to Submit

Undergraduate Just-in-Time Poster Submissions are Closed.