Brain histology and 3D reconstruction

Perception, Attention and Action

The major goal of faculty members studying perception is to understand how the brain creates our perception of the world around us. Questions addressed by our investigators include: 

  • How do we interpret and perceive sensory stimuli (for example, images, sounds, and touch)?
  • How does the activity of neurons relate to what we perceive?
  • How do we parse a sensory environment with many objects, how are neurons responsible for this, and how does attention influence what we perceive?
  • How do we perceive objects that share common properties as belonging to the same category? For example, how can we tell that a large picture of an orange cat and a small picture of a black cat taken from different angles both represent a cat? 
  • What are the principles guiding how we perceive and categorize sensory stimuli, and how are neurons responsible for this?
  • When what we perceive differs from what is physically in the world, like during an illusion, how does this relate to principles of perception and neuronal activity?
  • How do we integrate information from multiple senses, and how does the perception of one sense affect the perception of another sense?
  • How do we perceive information from multiple senses when they are mismatched?

Faculty studying perception

In-House
Affiliated