Nick Scott-Samuel
Affiliations: | University of Bristol, Bristol, England, United Kingdom |
Area:
VisionGoogle:
"Nick Scott-Samuel"Mean distance: 15.63 (cluster 23) | S | N | B | C | P |
Parents
Sign in to add mentorMark A. Georgeson | grad student | University of Birmingham | |
Robert F. Hess | post-doc | McGill | |
Andrew T. Smith | post-doc | University of London |
BETA: Related publications
See more...
Publications
You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect. |
Smart IE, Cuthill IC, Scott-Samuel NE. (2020) In the corner of the eye: camouflaging motion in the peripheral visual field. Proceedings. Biological Sciences. 287: 20192537 |
Scott-Samuel NE, Ashida H, Lovell PG, et al. (2018) Stacking Chairs: Local Sense and Global Nonsense. I-Perception. 9: 2041669517752372 |
Hogan BG, Cuthill IC, Scott-Samuel NE. (2017) Dazzle camouflage and the confusion effect: the influence of varying speed on target tracking. Animal Behaviour. 123: 349-353 |
Hogan BG, Scott-Samuel NE, Cuthill IC. (2016) Contrast, contours and the confusion effect in dazzle camouflage. Royal Society Open Science. 3: 160180 |
Benton CP, Thirkettle M, Scott-Samuel NE. (2016) Biological movement and the encoding of its motion and orientation. Scientific Reports. 6: 22393 |
Matthews O, Liggins E, Volonakis T, et al. (2015) Human Visual Search Performance for Camouflaged Targets. Journal of Vision. 15: 1164 |
Scott-Samuel NE, Holmes G, Baddeley R, et al. (2015) Moving in groups: how density and unpredictable motion affect predation risk. Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. 69: 867-872 |
Scott-Samuel NE, Holmes G, Baddeley R, et al. (2015) Erratum to: Moving in groups: how density and unpredictable motion affect predation risk Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. 69: 1065-1065 |
Ashida H, Scott-Samuel NE. (2014) Motion influences the perception of background lightness. I-Perception. 5: 41-9 |
Benton C, Thirkettle M, Scott-Samuel N. (2014) Biological movement and the encoding of approach Journal of Vision. 14: 1020-1020 |