Tatiana Emmanouil

Affiliations: 
Baruch College 
Area:
attention
Google:
"Tatiana Emmanouil"
Mean distance: 14.86 (cluster 23)
 
SNBCP

Parents

Sign in to add mentor
Lynn C. Robertson research assistant UC Berkeley
Anne Treisman grad student 2009 Princeton
 (Attentional limitations in the statistical processing of perceptual groups.)
Tony Ro post-doc The City College of the City University of New York

Children

Sign in to add trainee
Michael Lewis Epstein grad student 2014-2020 CUNY
BETA: Related publications

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.

Epstein ML, Emmanouil TA. (2021) Ensemble Statistics Can Be Available before Individual Item Properties: Electroencephalography Evidence Using the Oddball Paradigm. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience. 33: 1056-1068
Epstein ML, Quilty-Dunn J, Mandelbaum E, et al. (2020) The outlier paradox: The role of iterative ensemble coding in discounting outliers. Journal of Experimental Psychology. Human Perception and Performance
Epstein M, Emmanouil T. (2018) Neural Substrates of Ensemble Perception Journal of Vision. 18: 1148
Epstein ML, Emmanouil TA. (2017) Ensemble coding remains accurate under object and spatial visual working memory load. Attention, Perception & Psychophysics
Persuh M, Emmanouil TA, Ro T. (2016) Perceptual overloading reveals illusory contour perception without awareness of the inducers. Attention, Perception & Psychophysics
Epstein M, Emmanouil T. (2016) Statistical processing of perceptual groups under working memory load Journal of Vision. 16: 697
Emmanouil TA, Ro T. (2014) Amodal completion of unconsciously presented objects. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review. 21: 1188-94
Persuh M, Emmanouil TA, Ro T. (2014) Color assimilation without awareness of color context Journal of Vision. 14: 996-996
Emmanouil TA, Treisman A. (2014) Adaptation specific to conjunctions of features Journal of Vision. 14: 1049-1049
Emmanouil TA, Avigan P, Persuh M, et al. (2013) Saliency affects feedforward more than feedback processing in early visual cortex. Neuropsychologia. 51: 1497-503
See more...