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Robert F. Hess

Researcher at McGill University

Publications -  520
Citations -  20366

Robert F. Hess is an academic researcher from McGill University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Contrast (vision) & Spatial frequency. The author has an hindex of 72, co-authored 504 publications receiving 18782 citations. Previous affiliations of Robert F. Hess include University of Melbourne & University College London.

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The coding of spatial position by the human visual system: effects of spatial scale and contrast.

TL;DR: The results suggest that spatial localisation is independent of spatial scale and weakly dependent on contrast.
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Contour integration in the peripheral field.

TL;DR: It is shown that peripheral performance on this task does not get worse with eccentricity beyond about 10 degrees and that these results can be modeled by simple filtering without any subsequent cellular linking interactions.
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Structural sparseness and spatial phase alignment in natural scenes.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the relative amount of spatial phase alignment needed for humans to perceptually match natural scene image structures at three different spatial frequencies [3, 6, and 12 cyclesperdegree (cpd)] as a function of the number of structures within the image.
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Binocular influences on global motion processing in the human visual system.

TL;DR: The results suggest that the site of binocular combination for global motion perception occurs prior to the extra-striate cortex where motion integration occurs, suggesting the existence of a neural mechanism that involves more than just simple summation of the two monocular inputs.
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Long Lasting Effects of Daily Theta Burst rTMS Sessions in the Human Amblyopic Cortex

TL;DR: Initial results in a small number of patients indicate the cTBS may allow for enduring visual function improvements in adults with amblyopia.