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How our brains predict eye movements — and why afterimages don’t always line up
Learn what afterimages can teach us about how our brains predict our visual movements.
From a purely physical standpoint, the nose takes up a noticeable part of each eye’s visual field. Positioned directly ...
Eye-tracking tests can detect brain trauma deficits in patients more than a decade after their last concussion.
Merely imagining a positive encounter with someone can not only make you like them better but can also change how information about that person is stored in your brain, according to new research ...
As more patients consider alternatives to reading glasses and bifocals, Carrot LASIK & Eye Center is helping the public understand the science behind one of the most effective and innovative options ...
The pillow is cold against your cheek. Your upstairs neighbor creaks across the ceiling. You close your eyes; shadows and light dance across your vision. A cat sniffs at a piece of cheese. Dots fall ...
A new study shows that attention moves in fast repeating cycles in the brain, making us more open to distraction at certain moments.
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