"Peer-reviewed publications" is too narrow a concept for modern-age science. Contributions to the scientific community also include: peer-reviewed software, peer-viewed blog posts, public talks, and interactive data visualizations.
Below is a stream of all publication types. You can filter by type above.
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Ph.D Dissertation: A unified hypothesis of visual asymmetry, interhemispheric communication, and their typical development in humans
Left and right hemispheres process visual information differently. Here I present computational modeling to suggest that the major difference is in shape and contour processing, and interhemispheric connectivity must not be ignored.
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Uniquely human developmental timing may drive cerebral lateralization and interhemispheric coupling
Our paper showing that delays in transfer between the hemispheres cannot be as severe as typically stated. We also show that unreliability in delay can lead to decreased communication, and is likely present during development.
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Connectivity asymmetry can explain visual hemispheric asymmetries in local/global, face, and spatial frequency processing
My first conference paper, showing that our computational model of long-range lateral connections can account for many types of left/right differences in visual processing.