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Claire Wu

Researcher at University of Oxford

Publications -  5
Citations -  103

Claire Wu is an academic researcher from University of Oxford. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social environment & Circadian rhythm. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 5 publications receiving 94 citations. Previous affiliations of Claire Wu include University College London.

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Feature expectation heightens visual sensitivity during fine orientation discrimination.

TL;DR: In this article, the orientation of visual gratings embedded in low spatial-frequency noise was used to estimate decision kernels that revealed how visual features influenced choices, and the spatial attention cue had a multiplicative influence on decision kernels, consistent with an increase in response gain.
Journal Article

Feature expectation heightens visual sensitivity during fine orientation discrimination.

TL;DR: Observers made fine discrimination judgments about the orientation of visual gratings embedded in low spatial-frequency noise, and psychophysical reverse correlation was used to estimate decision 'kernels' that revealed how visual features influenced choices.
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Social provocation modulates decision making and feedback processing: examining the trajectory of development in adolescent participants

TL;DR: Elect EEG was used to examine social provocation, decision-making and win/loss feedback in adolescents and revealed that social provocation modules cognitive and brain responses differed between younger and older adolescents.
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Procedural complexity underlies the efficiency advantage in abacus-based arithmetic development

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the role of complementary numbers in the operation of the Japanese "soroban" abacus and found that more complementary numbers involved in a calculation, the more time it should take for mental abacus users to complete.
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Temporal changes of light-induced proteins in the SCN following treatment with the serotonin mixed agonist/antagonist BMY7378.

TL;DR: The findings suggest that BMY7378 may potentiate photic phase shifts at least partly by prolonging the activity of some, but not all, light-induced proteins and biochemical pathways involved in coupling the light signal to the output of the circadian clock, particularly those which are active many hours after the light signals reaches the SCN.