A growing body of evidence demonstrates that human vision operates differently in the space near and on the hands; for example, early findings in this literature reported that rapid onsets are detected faster near the hands, and that objects are searched more thoroughly. These and many other effects were attributed to enhanced attention via the recruitment of bimodal visual-tactile neurons representing the hand and near-hand space. However, recent research supports an alternative account: stimuli near the hands are preferentially processed by the action-oriented magnocellular visual pathway at the expense of processing in the parvocellular pathway. This Modulated Visual Pathways (MVP) account of altered vision near the hands describes a hand position-dependent trade-off between the two main retinal-cortical visual pathways between the eye and brain. The MVP account explains past findings and makes new predictions regarding near-hand vision supported by new research.
Contents
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Open AccessA touchy subject: advancing the modulated visual pathways account of altered vision near the handNovember 7, 2014
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Open AccessFrom blindsight to blindsmell: a mini reviewNovember 7, 2014
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January 14, 2015
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February 6, 2015
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February 11, 2015
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March 18, 2015
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June 11, 2015
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August 20, 2015
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August 21, 2015
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August 27, 2015
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September 3, 2015
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September 4, 2015
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Open AccessThe emerging neuroprotective role of mitochondrial uncoupling protein-2 in traumatic brain injurySeptember 7, 2015
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September 23, 2015
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Open AccessArousal, motor control, and Parkinson’s diseaseOctober 5, 2015
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October 8, 2015
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October 23, 2015
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October 26, 2015
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November 26, 2015
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November 27, 2015
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December 15, 2015
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December 16, 2015
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December 31, 2015