Perceptual learning
Perceptual learning is the process of learning improved skills of perception. These improvements range from simple sensory discriminations (e.g., distinguishing two musical tones from one another) to complex categorizations of spatial and temporal patterns relevant to real-world expertise (e.g., reading, seeing relations among chess pieces, knowing whether or not an X-ray image shows a tumor).
Perceptual learningPhilip KellmanPresbyopiaPerceptionEleanor J. GibsonRobert GoldstoneAmblyopiaPandemonium architectureHyperacuity (scientific term)AffordanceJapanese speakers learning r and lHoward NusbaumPattern recognitionConcept learningJean PiagetBayesian brainSemantic memoryBrain GymCategorizationImplicit memory
Richard ShiffrinAmblyaudiaStare-in-the-crowd effectLeibniz Institute for NeurobiologyNeuropsychological testAutomaticityResponse primingDecoded NeurofeedbackSifteo cubesBrain Fitness ProgramVisual extinctionJohn BarghSelf controlClaudio NaranjoRobert ShapleyExpertVisual searchExecutive functionsCognitive developmentLori L. Holt




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