Poster Sessions

Saturday Afternoon Posters, Banyan Breezeway and Pavilion

Poster Session: Saturday, May 18, 2024, 2:45 – 6:45 pm, Banyan Breezeway and Pavilion

Abstract#

Poster Title

First Author

Session

Room

26.417

Temporal dynamics provide new insights into the dimensions underlying object space

Kidder, Alexis

Object Recognition: High-level features

Pavilion

26.321

Saccade Target Status Influences the Reference Frame of Object-Location Binding

Chiu, Tzu-Yao

Eye Movements: Learning, expertise, context and faces

Banyan Breezeway

26.346

Representations of imaginary scene in the alpha band

Stecher, Rico

Visual Memory: Working memory and neural mechanisms

Banyan Breezeway

26.427

Temporal dynamics of foveal and peripheral visual discrimination during fixation

Kapisthalam, Sanjana

Object Recognition: Visual preference

Pavilion

26.432

Self-supervised models of human texture-discrimination

Das, Abhranil

Color, Light and Materials: Surfaces, materials

Pavilion

26.438

Changing the structure of color categories causally influences color-concept association generalization

Schoenlein, Melissa A.

Color, Light and Materials: Art, cognition

Pavilion

26.461

An intracranial EEG Natural Scenes Dataset to integrate electrophysiology with fMRI

Huang, Harvey

Scene Perception: Neural mechanisms

Pavilion

26.333

Motion masking at saccadic speed is largely invariant to motion amplitude

Nörenberg, Wiebke

Eye Movements: Saccades

Banyan Breezeway

26.311

Comparing neural responses to natural visual stimuli and electrical stimulation of visual cortex

Oswalt, Denise

Temporal Processing: Neural mechanisms, models

Banyan Breezeway

26.301

Can people learn their unique retinal motion statistics?

Xu, Jiaming

Motion: Optic flow

Banyan Breezeway

26.448

Discrimination thresholds reflect task-related, cognitive processes rather than cue uncertainty in depth perception

Kemp, Jovan

3D Perception: Depth cue integration, neural mechanisms

Pavilion

26.401

Are effects of perceptual (dis)fluency on social judgments specific to visual processing?

Walter-Terrill, Robert

Multisensory Processing: Audiovisual behavior

Pavilion

26.411

“Magnetic Sand” or “Interactivity” Illusions

Shimojo, Shinsuke

Multisensory Processing: Illusions, recognition

Pavilion

26.355

Impact of color priming and retro-cueing on visuospatial working memory accuracy is affected by target characteristics and response taskUndergraduate Just-In-Time Submission

Barron, Danica

Undergraduate Just-In-Time 1

Banyan Breezeway

26.402

What we don’t see shapes what we see: peripheral word semantics gates visual awareness

Hung, Shao-Min (Sean)

Multisensory Processing: Audiovisual behavior

Pavilion

26.347

SSVEPs reveal dynamic (re-)allocation of spatial attention during maintenance and utilization of visual working memory

Chota, Samson

Visual Memory: Working memory and neural mechanisms

Banyan Breezeway

26.428

Characterizing Frequency Response Functions of Low-Level and High-Level Stimuli in the Human Brain

Zhao, Na

Object Recognition: Visual preference

Pavilion

26.312

The effect of fast flicker adaptation on contrast discrimination

Song, Jaeseon

Temporal Processing: Neural mechanisms, models

Banyan Breezeway

26.449

Contributions of absolute binocular disparity, motion parallax and angular declination to absolute target localization

Bai, Lingling

3D Perception: Depth cue integration, neural mechanisms

Pavilion

26.412

Visual and auditory stimulus features, and their crossmodal correspondence, affects perceptual selection in the bounce/stream illusion

Jeon, Subin

Multisensory Processing: Illusions, recognition

Pavilion

26.302

A computational model for the concurrent retrieval of object and self-motion information from optic flow

Scherff, Malte

Motion: Optic flow

Banyan Breezeway

26.433

The effect of attentional load on modal and amodal completion

Wang, Zeyu

Color, Light and Materials: Surfaces, materials

Pavilion

26.439

Estimating human color-concept associations from multimodal language models

Mukherjee, Kushin

Color, Light and Materials: Art, cognition

Pavilion

26.322

Contextual saccadic adaptation : you can see it but you can’t learn from it

Martel, Maxime

Eye Movements: Learning, expertise, context and faces

Banyan Breezeway

26.334

Characteristics of head-eye saccades in natural tasks

Jolly, Paul

Eye Movements: Saccades

Banyan Breezeway

26.418

The representational dynamics of visual expectations in the brain

Caplette, Laurent

Object Recognition: High-level features

Pavilion

26.462

How do visual tasks alter the representational space of identical scenes? Insights from a brain-supervised convolutional neural network

Hansen, Bruce C.

Scene Perception: Neural mechanisms

Pavilion

26.356

Artificial Fixation Points in Reading: Do They Work?Undergraduate Just-In-Time Submission

Bhimani, Ali

Undergraduate Just-In-Time 1

Banyan Breezeway

26.429

The categorization difficulty contributes to the uncanny valley without animacy

Sasaki, Kota

Object Recognition: Visual preference

Pavilion

26.434

Can material-robust detection of 3D non-rigid deformation be explained by predictive processing through generative models?

Nishida, Shin'ya

Color, Light and Materials: Surfaces, materials

Pavilion

26.419

Categorical object properties outweigh local visual information in object recognition

Scialom, Elsa

Object Recognition: High-level features

Pavilion

26.440

A Bayesian analysis of the phylogenetic development of monolexemic color terms in Dravidian languages.

Shiva Ram, Male

Color, Light and Materials: Art, cognition

Pavilion

26.323

Effective and non-effective cues for probabilistic contextual visuomotor adaptation

Montagnini, Anna

Eye Movements: Learning, expertise, context and faces

Banyan Breezeway

26.303

Neural processing of scene-relative object movement during self-movement

Shen, Xuechun

Motion: Optic flow

Banyan Breezeway

26.348

Brain networks involved in recognition memory are recruited more strongly, and more extensively, by real objects than by images of objects.

Fairchild, Grant T.

Visual Memory: Working memory and neural mechanisms

Banyan Breezeway

26.313

Delayed normalization accounts for temporal dynamics in visual and somatosensory cortices

Li, Luhe

Temporal Processing: Neural mechanisms, models

Banyan Breezeway

26.463

Linguistic and visual similarity judgements predict EEG representational dynamics in visual perception and sentence reading

Simkova, Katerina Marie

Scene Perception: Neural mechanisms

Pavilion

26.413

Tilting the balance: do balance abilities predict the body tilt illusion?

Baia, Sophia R.

Multisensory Processing: Illusions, recognition

Pavilion

26.450

Natural size-distance scaling reduces, but does not eliminate, depth matching errors from conflicting occlusion and stereopsis

Au, Domenic

3D Perception: Depth cue integration, neural mechanisms

Pavilion

26.403

Cross-Modal Interactions Differ Across Sounds in the Extreme Periphery

Cederblad, Matilda

Multisensory Processing: Audiovisual behavior

Pavilion

26.335

The effect of visual competition on saccadic behavior in a stop signal task

Weir, Zachariah A.

Eye Movements: Saccades

Banyan Breezeway

26.357

Common perceptual features drive braille letter recognition across modalities and levels of expertiseUndergraduate Just-In-Time Submission

Yun, Hannah

Undergraduate Just-In-Time 1

Banyan Breezeway

26.404

Don’t talk to me! Relevant sound disrupts visual search, irrelevant sound does not

Röer, Jan Philipp

Multisensory Processing: Audiovisual behavior

Pavilion

26.349

Is Sensory Visual Cortex Required for Visual Working Memory: Insights from Meta-Analysis and Experimental Evidence

Konstantinou, Nikos

Visual Memory: Working memory and neural mechanisms

Banyan Breezeway

26.430

The psychophysics of style

Boger, Tal

Object Recognition: Visual preference

Pavilion

26.435

Neural representation of translucent and opaque objects images in macaque inferior temporal cortex

Nakada, Hoko

Color, Light and Materials: Surfaces, materials

Pavilion

26.314

Neural evidence for a two-stage model of conscious perception

Menétrey, Maëlan Q.

Temporal Processing: Neural mechanisms, models

Banyan Breezeway

26.324

In-built and learnt priors for motion direction perceptual decision-making

Ardasheva, Liubov

Eye Movements: Learning, expertise, context and faces

Banyan Breezeway

26.304

Biases in Perceived Object Speed in Depth During Visual Self-Motion  

Pandey, Anita

Motion: Optic flow

Banyan Breezeway

26.414

Visual-haptic weight illusions are explained by efficient coding based on correlated natural statistics

Bays, Paul

Multisensory Processing: Illusions, recognition

Pavilion

26.420

Quantifying the role of perceived curvature in the processing of natural object images

Stoinski, Laura M.

Object Recognition: High-level features

Pavilion

26.441

Ensemble coding of color in a pile-sort task

Lindsey, Delwin

Color, Light and Materials: Art, cognition

Pavilion

26.451

The effect of reflectance, depth gain, and scene complexity on perceived depth

Hornsey, Rebecca

3D Perception: Depth cue integration, neural mechanisms

Pavilion

26.336

Oculomotor freezing reveals perceptual priority during free-viewing

Hanning, Nina

Eye Movements: Saccades

Banyan Breezeway

26.464

Mapping contour properties across visual cortex

Han, Seohee

Scene Perception: Neural mechanisms

Pavilion

26.358

Drawings reveal no benefit of sleep on memoryUndergraduate Just-In-Time Submission

Rosenthal, Samuel R.

Undergraduate Just-In-Time 1

Banyan Breezeway

26.305

Effects of visual cues on flow parsing and simultaneous heading perception

Shan, Zhoukuidong

Motion: Optic flow

Banyan Breezeway

26.325

Modulating color cue effectiveness: The role of active selection in visuomotor adaptation

OUELD KADDOUR EL HALLAOUI, Hamza

Eye Movements: Learning, expertise, context and faces

Banyan Breezeway

26.315

The (lack of) correlation between evoked and spontaneous brain oscillations: an individual difference approach

xiong, Sihan

Temporal Processing: Neural mechanisms, models

Banyan Breezeway

26.337

Color distribution learning modulates saccade endpoints: a study of the global effect

Entzmann, Léa

Eye Movements: Saccades

Banyan Breezeway

26.436

Skewness adaptation induced an asymmetric effect in glossiness perception but not in translucency

Kiyokawa, Hiroaki

Color, Light and Materials: Surfaces, materials

Pavilion

26.465

Mapping neural similarity spaces for scenes with generative adversarial networks

Son, Gaeun

Scene Perception: Neural mechanisms

Pavilion

26.415

Facilitation of visual and haptic recognition after multisensory active control of real 3D objects.

Kyler, Hellen

Multisensory Processing: Illusions, recognition

Pavilion

26.431

Seeing beauty even when none may exist

Guan, Chenxiao

Object Recognition: Visual preference

Pavilion

26.405

Dynamic Synthetic Faces Improve the Intelligibility of Noisy Speech, But Not As Much As Real Faces

Yu, Yingjia

Multisensory Processing: Audiovisual behavior

Pavilion

26.350

Cortical control of working memory prioritization

Li, Hsin-Hung

Visual Memory: Working memory and neural mechanisms

Banyan Breezeway

26.442

Top-down knowledge can affect perception when the input is ambiguous

Cohen, Michael

Color, Light and Materials: Art, cognition

Pavilion

26.421

The contribution of features, shape, and semantics to object similarity

Pitchford, Brent

Object Recognition: High-level features

Pavilion

26.452

Quantifying the mechanisms for the role of visual context on orientation judgments

Brannon, Ernestine

3D Perception: Depth cue integration, neural mechanisms

Pavilion

26.359

Exploring the effects of delayed visual feedback on dynamic postural controlUndergraduate Just-In-Time Submission

Pourhashemi, Nora

Undergraduate Just-In-Time 1

Banyan Breezeway

26.416

The illusion of a neural common factor for illusions

Ozkirli, Ayberk

Multisensory Processing: Illusions, recognition

Pavilion

26.437

Probing the Relationship between Material Categorization and Material Property Estimation using Ambiguous Visual Stimuli

Liao, Chenxi

Color, Light and Materials: Surfaces, materials

Pavilion

26.466

Neural interpolation of dynamic visual information in natural scenes

Yeh, Lu-Chun

Scene Perception: Neural mechanisms

Pavilion

26.306

Head and eye dynamics across different navigational goals

Méndez, Andrés H.

Motion: Optic flow

Banyan Breezeway

26.338

Spatiotemporal competition resolution during anti-saccades

Ouerfelli-Ethier, Julie

Eye Movements: Saccades

Banyan Breezeway

26.326

Eye tracking in expertise assessment case studies

Shelepin, Evgenii

Eye Movements: Learning, expertise, context and faces

Banyan Breezeway

26.351

Investigating the effect of real-world background images on spatial working memory representations

Schmitz, Nicholas

Visual Memory: Working memory and neural mechanisms

Banyan Breezeway

26.406

Perception of Materials in Virtual Reality based on their Audiovisual Properties

Koppisetty, Harshitha

Multisensory Processing: Audiovisual behavior

Pavilion

26.316

Distinct mechanisms account for perceptual suppression forwards and backwards in time

Epstein, Michael

Temporal Processing: Neural mechanisms, models

Banyan Breezeway

26.443

Long-term semantic knowledge predicts changes in color perception

Green, Alexis

Color, Light and Materials: Art, cognition

Pavilion

26.453

Slant discrimination performance follows patterns predicted by binocular viewing geometry

Shields, Stephanie M

3D Perception: Depth cue integration, neural mechanisms

Pavilion

26.422

A radial template space reveals organization of feature and task-selective regions in lateral occipitotemporal cortex

Lescroart, Mark D.

Object Recognition: High-level features

Pavilion

26.360

Exploring the Influence of Object Affordances and Proximity on Top-Down Visual Processing in the Dorsal and Ventral StreamsUndergraduate Just-In-Time Submission

Hofer, Nisa

Undergraduate Just-In-Time 1

Banyan Breezeway

26.467

Object-selective cortex incorporates predictions from scene context to aid object recognition

Gayet, Surya

Scene Perception: Neural mechanisms

Pavilion

26.307

The influence of anticipation on human heading perception

Si, Roselind

Motion: Optic flow

Banyan Breezeway

26.339

Remapping in LIP takes time

Alkan, Yelda

Eye Movements: Saccades

Banyan Breezeway

26.407

Perceptual Alignment for Using Visual Inputs to Infer the Auditory Contents of a Scene

Aslan, Samer

Multisensory Processing: Audiovisual behavior

Pavilion

26.327

Eye Movement Dynamics as a Measure of Expertise in the Video Game ExciteBike

Levin, Emily

Eye Movements: Learning, expertise, context and faces

Banyan Breezeway

26.352

Testing the duration of spontaneous spatial representation in working memory when items can be differentiated by temporal-order.

Bendickson, Sage

Visual Memory: Working memory and neural mechanisms

Banyan Breezeway

26.317

A dynamic normalization model with temporal receptive fields captures perceptual suppression by past and future stimuli

Chapman, Angus

Temporal Processing: Neural mechanisms, models

Banyan Breezeway

26.423

Naturalistic dataset augmentation and self-supervised learning lead to more human-like recognition of occluded objects in convolutional neural networks

Coggan, David

Object Recognition: High-level features

Pavilion

26.455

Binocular depth information modulates object-selective activation in high-level visual cortex

Ahsan, Tasfia

3D Perception: Depth cue integration, neural mechanisms

Pavilion

26.361

Impact of Static Physical Arousal on Attentional NetworksUndergraduate Just-In-Time Submission

Glotfelty, Jenna

Undergraduate Just-In-Time 1

Banyan Breezeway

26.408

Using hearing and vision for localization, motion perception, and motion prediction

Yuan, Yichen

Multisensory Processing: Audiovisual behavior

Pavilion

26.318

Neural dynamics of grouping explain properties of serial dependence in orientation

Francis, Gregory

Temporal Processing: Neural mechanisms, models

Banyan Breezeway

26.424

Probing unexplored areas in high-dimensional fMRI voxel space using an encoding model and image synthesis

Yashiro, Ryuto

Object Recognition: High-level features

Pavilion

26.468

Occipito-Ventral pathway dynamically transforms images into low-dimensional feature manifolds aligned on those supporting behavior

Duan, Yaocong

Scene Perception: Neural mechanisms

Pavilion

26.353

Using Rapid Invisible Frequency Tagging to track internal attention

Arora, Kabir

Visual Memory: Working memory and neural mechanisms

Banyan Breezeway

26.444

Eyes, Still Lifes & Eidolons – the role of colors and contours when viewing still-life paintings?

Braun, Doris I.

Color, Light and Materials: Art, cognition

Pavilion

26.308

Modeling optic flow tuning in MSTd with convolutional neural networks

Layton, Oliver

Motion: Optic flow

Banyan Breezeway

26.328

Investigating the links between sustained attention, gaze fixation patterns, and face identity discrimination performance

Michaels, Jesse

Eye Movements: Learning, expertise, context and faces

Banyan Breezeway

26.340

Differential saccade related modulations in marmoset V1 across cell layers and types

More, Neya

Eye Movements: Saccades

Banyan Breezeway

26.456

Involvement of cerebellar vermis in the perception of depth from motion explored with Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation

Johnson, Emily

3D Perception: Depth cue integration, neural mechanisms

Pavilion

26.362

Information Reliability Modulates Experience-Driven AttentionUndergraduate Just-In-Time Submission

Doyle, Alenka

Undergraduate Just-In-Time 1

Banyan Breezeway

26.409

How does subjective confidence influence multisensory integration?

Dou, Wei

Multisensory Processing: Audiovisual behavior

Pavilion

26.469

Recognizing places versus navigating through them are differently sensitive to increasingly peripheral visual information

Jung, Yaelan

Scene Perception: Neural mechanisms

Pavilion

26.354

Support for and application of a measure of neural efficiency in visual processing

Wenger, Michael

Visual Memory: Working memory and neural mechanisms

Banyan Breezeway

26.329

The eyes move towards fearful faces hundreds of milliseconds before they reach awareness

Hu, Junchao

Eye Movements: Learning, expertise, context and faces

Banyan Breezeway

26.319

Pooling and segregation across different time scales

Hochmitz, Ilanit

Temporal Processing: Neural mechanisms, models

Banyan Breezeway

26.341

Saccade response modulation in areas MT/MTC across cell types and layers

Bucklaew, Amy

Eye Movements: Saccades

Banyan Breezeway

26.445

Adapting to art: adaptation alters impressions of impressionist painting styles

Charkhtab Basim, Fatemeh

Color, Light and Materials: Art, cognition

Pavilion

26.457

Involvement of cortical area MT in the perception of depth from motion explored with Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation

Corbett, Shane

3D Perception: Depth cue integration, neural mechanisms

Pavilion

26.309

Tracking visual targets during simulated self-motion

Anderson, Matt D.

Motion: Optic flow

Banyan Breezeway

26.425

Revisiting shape versus texture bias in primate vision: contrasting human vs. monkey perceptual strategies

Zaidi, Syed Suleman Abbas

Object Recognition: High-level features

Pavilion

26.363

Is the depth cue of Familiar Size computed using the biological equivalent of a trigonometric table?Undergraduate Just-In-Time Submission

Darefsky, Jhera

Undergraduate Just-In-Time 1

Banyan Breezeway

26.426

Spurious reconstruction from brain activity: The thin line between reconstruction, classification, and hallucination

Shirakawa, Ken

Object Recognition: High-level features

Pavilion

26.310

Exploring top-down influences on illusory self-motion perception (vection) in younger and older adults

Murovec, Brandy

Motion: Optic flow

Banyan Breezeway

26.470

Representation of navigational affordances and ego-motion in the occipital place area

Kamps, Frederik S.

Scene Perception: Neural mechanisms

Pavilion

26.330

Specified functions of the first two fixations in face recognition: sampling the general-to-specific facial information.

liu, Meng

Eye Movements: Learning, expertise, context and faces

Banyan Breezeway

26.458

Stereomotion Scotomas: An impairment of velocity-based mechanisms revealed by variation of stimulus speed

Dogar, Amna

3D Perception: Depth cue integration, neural mechanisms

Pavilion

26.320

Analysis of the ERG Off-response

Tyler, Christopher

Temporal Processing: Neural mechanisms, models

Banyan Breezeway

26.342

Functional architecture of visual responses in dorsal and ventral banks of anterior cingulate cortex

Thirunavukkarasu, Pranavan

Eye Movements: Saccades

Banyan Breezeway

26.446

Ugly colours: Chromatic determinants of image aesthetic valence

Kučera, Jan

Color, Light and Materials: Art, cognition

Pavilion

26.410

Natural heading statistics over 42 hours of natural activity: Observations and implications for Bayesian modeling

Sinnott, Christian B.

Multisensory Processing: Audiovisual behavior

Pavilion

26.364

Making Sense of Randomness: Investigating Perceived Event Boundaries Within Scrambled Picture StoriesUndergraduate Just-In-Time Submission

Wilson, Lindsey K.

Undergraduate Just-In-Time 1

Banyan Breezeway

26.447

Art has no gender, only gender bias

Damiano, Claudia

Color, Light and Materials: Art, cognition

Pavilion

26.471

Unveiling task-dependent action affordance representations: Insights from scene-selective cortex and deep neural networks

Bartnik, Clemens G.

Scene Perception: Neural mechanisms

Pavilion

26.343

Steady-State Visually Evoked Potentials (SSVEPs) in the presence of voluntary eye and head movements

Liu, Weichen

Eye Movements: Saccades

Banyan Breezeway

26.331

Eye Movement Modulates the Face Inversion Effect in Emotion Recognition

Yang, Angeline

Eye Movements: Learning, expertise, context and faces

Banyan Breezeway

26.459

Reversed Depth Illusion in Random-dot Stereograms Becomes More Visible When the Stereograms Are More Dynamic in Both Central and Peripheral Vision

Zhaoping, Li

3D Perception: Depth cue integration, neural mechanisms

Pavilion

26.365

Representation-specific and general components of the task-evoked pupillary response in visual working memoryUndergraduate Just-In-Time Submission

Kemball-Cook, William

Undergraduate Just-In-Time 1

Banyan Breezeway

26.344

Probing correlates of saccadic suppression in the primate superior colliculus and primary visual cortex using simulated and real saccades

Baumann, Matthias Philipp

Eye Movements: Saccades

Banyan Breezeway

26.460

Oculomotor control in fine shape and stereo judgements during natural head movements

Cox, Michele A.

3D Perception: Depth cue integration, neural mechanisms

Pavilion

26.332

Effects of contextual information on eye movements and recall performance in face learning

Speck, Martina J

Eye Movements: Learning, expertise, context and faces

Banyan Breezeway

26.366

Rhythmic attentional sampling in visual perception and visual working memoryUndergraduate Just-In-Time Submission

Santiago, Khayla

Undergraduate Just-In-Time 1

Banyan Breezeway

26.345

Predictive Remapping in Neural Networks: A Model Based on Corollary Discharge Signals for Visual Continuity Across Saccades

Nandy, Anirvan

Eye Movements: Saccades

Banyan Breezeway

26.367

Tactile stimuli are mirrored in accord with external vantage points induced by virtual realityUndergraduate Just-In-Time Submission

Das, Anwesha

Undergraduate Just-In-Time 1

Banyan Breezeway

26.368

Testing Whether Individual Dimensions of Spatial Locations Can Be Prioritized in Visuospatial Working MemoryUndergraduate Just-In-Time Submission

Tao, Jocelyn

Undergraduate Just-In-Time 1

Banyan Breezeway

26.369

The Influence of Saccade Predictability on Feature Binding after an Eye MovementUndergraduate Just-In-Time Submission

Jaen, Isabel S.

Undergraduate Just-In-Time 1

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.