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Albert Yonas

Affiliations: 
2017- Psychology Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, United States 
Area:
Infant Visual Perception
Website:
http://cehd.umn.edu/icd/YonasLab/default.html
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"Albert Yonas"
Bio:

After graduating from the University of Michigan in Psychology in 1964, Albert Yonas began working with James and Eleanor Gibson at Cornell University on visual perception and the development of attention. In the fall of 1968, he was hired as an Assistant Prof. at the Institute of Child Development, University of Minnesota. Forty-nine years later he retired and moved to Phoenix to be close to his two daughters and four of his six grandchildren. Over his career he explored the development of space perception in human infants, monkeys, and, more recently, children in India who were born blind and restored to sight in their teens.

Dr. Yonas is interested in advancing our understanding of the problem of subjective experience or consciousness, by exploring the depth cue called familiar size. He is working on the question of what makes an object memorable and aesthetically pleasing.

Mean distance: 15.85 (cluster 8)
 
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Children

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Martha E. Arterberry grad student UMN
Kirsten Condry grad student UMN
Lincoln Craton grad student UMN
Carl Granrud grad student UMN
Jose E. Nanez Sr. grad student UMN
Chryle A. Elieff grad student 2004 UMN
Sherryse Corrow grad student 2013 UMN
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Publications

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Vogelsang L, Gilad-Gutnick S, Ehrenberg E, et al. (2018) Potential downside of high initial visual acuity. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Corrow SL, Mathison J, Granrud CE, et al. (2014) Six-month-old infants' perception of the hollow face illusion: evidence for a general convexity bias. Perception. 43: 1177-90
Tsuruhara A, Corrow S, Kanazawa S, et al. (2014) Infants' ability to respond to depth from the retinal size of human faces: comparing monocular and binocular preferential-looking. Infant Behavior & Development. 37: 562-70
Dalrymple KA, Fletcher K, Corrow S, et al. (2014) "A room full of strangers every day": the psychosocial impact of developmental prosopagnosia on children and their families. Journal of Psychosomatic Research. 77: 144-50
Tsuruhara A, Corrow S, Kanazawa S, et al. (2014) Measuring young infants' sensitivity to height-in-the-picture-plane by contrasting monocular and binocular preferential-looking. Developmental Psychobiology. 56: 109-16
Corrow S, Donlon T, Mathison J, et al. (2014) Differences in Face Recognition Ability Predicts Patterns of Holistic Face Processing in Children Journal of Vision. 14: 572-572
Adamson V, Donlon T, Corrow S, et al. (2014) Can Preferential Looking be Used to Assess Depth Perception in Infants Who Are too Young to Reach? Journal of Vision. 14: 272-272
Condry K, Yonas A. (2013) Six-month-old infants use motion parallax to direct reaching in depth. Infant Behavior & Development. 36: 238-44
Mathison J, Corrow S, Adamson V, et al. (2013) Evidence for a general convexity assumption in 6-month-old infants. Journal of Vision. 13: 736-736
Adamson V, Corrow S, Shuwairi S, et al. (2013) Differentiation of Impossible and Possible Figures Through the Exploration of Ocular Movements in Young Children. Journal of Vision. 13: 728-728
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