Jiye G. Kim

Affiliations: 
Neuroscience Institute Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 
Area:
Visual Cognition, Object Recognition, Scene Comprehension
Website:
http://geon.usc.edu/~jiyekim
Google:
"Jiye Kim"
Mean distance: 13.47 (cluster 23)
 
SNBCP

Parents

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Irving Biederman grad student 2006-2011 USC
 (The neural coding of inter-object relations.)
Gabriel Kreiman post-doc The Children's Hospital and Harvard Medical School
Sabine Kastner post-doc 2011- Princeton
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Publications

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Kim JG, Gregory E, Landau B, et al. (2020) Functions of ventral visual cortex after bilateral medial temporal lobe damage. Progress in Neurobiology. 101819
Kim JG, Aminoff EM, Kastner S, et al. (2015) A Neural Basis for Developmental Topographic Disorientation. The Journal of Neuroscience : the Official Journal of the Society For Neuroscience. 35: 12954-69
Seidl-Rathkopf KN, Kim JG, Peelen MV, et al. (2014) Interactions between space-based and category-based attention in the ventral and dorsal visual system during real-world visual search Journal of Vision. 14: 870-870
Kim JG, Kastner S. (2014) Mapping natural and texture scene representations across the visual system Journal of Vision. 14: 1084-1084
Kim JG, Kastner S. (2013) Attention flexibly alters tuning for object categories. Trends in Cognitive Sciences. 17: 368-70
Kim JG, Gregory E, Landau B, et al. (2013) Ventral visual selectivity and adaptation in amnesia. Journal of Vision. 13: 5-5
Kim JG, Biederman I. (2012) Greater sensitivity to nonaccidental than metric changes in the relations between simple shapes in the lateral occipital cortex. Neuroimage. 63: 1818-26
Kim JG, Biederman I. (2012) Greater modulation of LO responses to changes in nonaccidental than metric relations between simple shapes. Journal of Vision. 12: 1066-1066
Kim JG, Biederman I, Juan CH. (2011) The benefit of object interactions arises in the lateral occipital cortex independent of attentional modulation from the intraparietal sulcus: a transcranial magnetic stimulation study. The Journal of Neuroscience : the Official Journal of the Society For Neuroscience. 31: 8320-4
Kim JG, Biederman I. (2011) Where do objects become scenes? Cerebral Cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991). 21: 1738-46
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