Integrative Neuroscience and Cognition Center - CNRS UMR 8002
CNRS, Université de Paris
45 Rue des Saints Pères
75270 Paris Cedex 06
France

Fax : +33 (0) 1 42 86 XX XX

Pr. Patrick Cavanagh
(alumni)

Professor Emeritus
Vision

room H431C

Recent Publications

Articles

  • Desantis A, Chan-Hon-Tong A, Collins T, Hoogendorn H, Cavanagh P. Decoding the Temporal Dynamics of Covert Spatial Attention Using Multivariate EEG Analysis: Contributions of Raw Amplitude and Alpha Power. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 2020.
  • Zhimin Chen, Anna Kosovicheva, Benjamin Wolfe, Patrick Cavanagh, Andrei Gorea, & David Whitney. Unifying Visual Space Across the Left and Right Hemifields. Psychological Science, 2018.
  • Maus GW, Duyck M, Lisi M, Collins T, Whitney D, Cavanagh P. Target Displacements during Eye Blinks Trigger Automatic Recalibration of Gaze Direction. Curr Biol, 2017, 27 (3), pp.445-450.
  • Adamian N, Cavanagh P. Fröhlich effect and delays of visual attention. J Vis, 2017, 17 (1), pp.3.
  • Silvestre D, Cavanagh P, Arleo A, Allard R. Adding temporally localized noise can enhance the contribution of target knowledge on contrast detection. J Vis, 2017, 17 (2), pp.5.
  • Lisi M, Cavanagh P. Different spatial representations guide eye and hand movements. J Vis, 2017, 17 (2), pp.12.
  • Edwards G, Paeye C, Marque P, VanRullen R, Cavanagh P. Predictive position computations mediated by parietal areas: TMS evidence. Neuroimage, 2017, 153, pp.49-57.
  • Greenwood JA, Szinte M, Sayim B, Cavanagh P. Variations in crowding, saccadic precision, and spatial localization reveal the shared topology of spatial vision. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A, 2017.
  • Paeye C, Collins T, Cavanagh P. Transsaccadic perceptual fusion. J Vis, 2017, 17 (1), pp.14.
  • Anstis S, Dykmans N, Kaneko S, Cavanagh P. Orbiting Black/White Rays Produce an. Perception, 2016. (PDF)
  • Krüger HM, Collins T, Englitz B, Cavanagh P. Saccades create similar mislocalizations in visual and auditory space. J Neurophysiol, 2016, 115 (4), pp.2237-45. (PDF)
  • Wu DA, Cavanagh P. Where are you looking? Pseudogaze in afterimages. J Vis, 2016, 16 (5), pp.6. (PDF)
  • Born S, Krüger HM, Zimmermann E, Cavanagh P. Compression of Space for Low Visibility Probes. Front Syst Neurosci, 2016, 10, pp.21. (PDF)
  • Eymond C, Cavanagh P, Collins T. Feature-based attention across saccades and immediate postsaccadic selection. Atten Percept Psychophys, 2016, 78 (5), pp.1293-301. (PDF)
  • Szinte M, Jonikaitis D, Rolfs M, Cavanagh P, Deubel H. Presaccadic motion integration between current and future retinotopic locations of attended objects. J Neurophysiol, 2016, 116 (4), pp.1592-1602. (PDF)
  • Knapen T, Swisher JD, Tong F, Cavanagh P. Oculomotor Remapping of Visual Information to Foveal Retinotopic Cortex. Front Syst Neurosci, 2016, 10, pp.54. (PDF)
  • Bourrelly C, Quinet J, Cavanagh P, Goffart L. Learning the trajectory of a moving visual target and evolution of its tracking in the monkey. J Neurophysiol, 2016, 116 (6), pp.2739-2751.
  • Thibault L, van-den-Berg R, Cavanagh P, Sergent C. Retrospective Attention Gates Discrete Conscious Access to Past Sensory Stimuli. PLoS ONE, 2016, 11. (PDF)
  • Szinte M, Carrasco M, Cavanagh P, Rolfs M. Attentional trade-offs maintain the tracking of moving objects across saccades. J Neurophysiol, 2015, 113 (7), pp.2220-31. (PDF)
  • Kohler PJ, Cavanagh P, Tse PU. Motion-induced position shifts are influenced by global motion, but dominated by component motion. Vision Res, 2015, 110 (Pt A), pp.93-9. (PDF)
  • Hogendoorn H, Verstraten FA, Cavanagh P. Strikingly rapid neural basis of motion-induced position shifts revealed by high temporal-resolution EEG pattern classification. Vision Res, 2015, 113 (Pt A), pp.1-10. (PDF)
  • de Vito S, Lunven M, Bourlon C, Duret C, Cavanagh P, Bartolomeo P. When brain damage. J Neurophysiol, 2015, 114 (6), pp.3351-8. (PDF)
  • Veenemans AA, Cavanagh P. An unattended mask makes an attended target disappear. J Vis, 2015, 15 (14), pp.9. (PDF)
  • Shioiri S, Ogawa M, Yaguchi H, Cavanagh P. Attentional facilitation of detection of flicker on moving objects. J Vis, 2015, 15 (14), pp.3. (PDF)
  • Lisi M, Cavanagh P. Dissociation between the Perceptual and Saccadic Localization of Moving Objects. Current Biology, 2015, 25, pp.2535-2540. (PDF)
  • Perdreau F, Cavanagh P. Drawing experts have better visual memory while drawing. Journal of Vision, 2015, 15, pp.1. (PDF)
  • Born S, Zimmermann E, Cavanagh P. The spatial profile of mask-induced compression for perception and action. Vision Research, 2015, 110, pp.128-141. (PDF)
  • Lisi M, Cavanagh P, Zorzi M. Spatial constancy of attention across eye movements is mediated by the presence of visual objects. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 2015, 77, pp.1159-1169. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. Q & A: Patrick Cavanagh. Curr Biol, 2014, 24 (7), pp.R260-2. (PDF)
  • Greenwood JA, Sayim B, Cavanagh P. Crowding is reduced by onset transients in the target object (but not in the flankers). J Vis, 2014, 14 (6), pp.2. (PDF)
  • Störmer VS, Alvarez GA, Cavanagh P. Within-hemifield competition in early visual areas limits the ability to track multiple objects with attention. J Neurosci, 2014, 34 (35), pp.11526-33. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. Applied neuroscience. Curr Biol, 2014, 24 (18), pp.R849-51. (PDF)
  • Sayim B, Greenwood JA, Cavanagh P. Foveal target repetitions reduce crowding. J Vis, 2014, 14 (6). (PDF)
  • Tripathy SP, Cavanagh P, Bedell HE. Large crowding zones in peripheral vision for briefly presented stimuli. J Vis, 2014, 14 (6), pp.11. (PDF)
  • Zimmermann E, Born S, Fink G R, Cavanagh P. Masking produces compression of space and time in the absence of eye movements. Journal of Neurophysiology, 2014, 112, pp.3066-3076. (PDF)
  • Perdreau F, Cavanagh P. Drawing skill is related to the efficiency of encoding object structure. i-Perception, 2014, 5, pp.101-119.
  • Macdonald J, Cavanagh P, VanRullen R. Attentional sampling of multiple wagon wheels. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 2014, 76, pp.64-72.
  • Li H-H, Shim W M, Cavanagh P. Backward position shift in apparent motion. Journal of Vision, 2014, 14, pp.1-10.
  • Zimmerman E, Fink G R, Cavanagh P. Perifoveal spatial compression. Journal of Vision, 2013, 13, pp.1-9.
  • Wexler M, Glennerster A, Cavanagh P, Ito H. Default perception of high-speed motion. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciecnes, 2013, 110, pp.7080-7085.
  • Sayim B, Cavanagh P. Grouping and crowding affect target appearance over different spatial scales. PLoS ONE, 2013, 8, pp.e71188.
  • Rolfs M, Dambacher M, Cavanagh P. Visual adaptation of the perception of causality. Current Biology, 2013, 23, pp.250-254.
  • Pelli D G, Cavanagh P. Object recognition: visual crowding from a distance. Current Biology (Dispatch), 2013, 23, pp.R478-R479.
  • Jonikaitis D, Szinte M, Rolfs M, Cavanagh P. Allocation of attention across saccades. Journal of Neurophysiology, 2013, 109, pp.1416-1424.
  • Ikeda H, Watanabe K, Cavanagh P. Crowding of biological motion stimuli. Journal of Vision, 2013, 13, pp.1-6.
  • Franconeri S L, Alvarez G A, Cavanagh P. Flexible cognitive resources: competitive content maps for attention and memory. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 2013, 17, pp.134-141.
  • Cavanagh P, Anstis S. The flash grab effect. Vision Research, 2013, 91, pp.8-20.
  • Perdreau F, Cavanagh P. The artist’s advantage: Better integration of object information across eye movements. i-Perception, 2013, 4, pp.380-395.
  • Perdreau F, Cavanagh P. Is artists’ perception more veridical?. Frontiers in Neuroscience, 2013, 7, pp.1-11.
  • Allard R, Cavanagh P. Different processing strategies underlie voluntary averaging in low and high noise. Journal of Vision, 2012, 12, pp.ArtID: 6. (PDF)
  • van Vugt FT, Cavanagh P. Response trajectories reveal conflict phase in image-word mismatch. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 2012, 74, pp.263-268. (PDF)
  • Alvarez GA, Gill J, Cavanagh P. Anatomical Constraints on Attention: Hemifield Independence is a Signature of Multifocal Spatial Selection. Journal of Vision, 2012, 12, pp.ArtID: 9. (PDF)
  • Yeh S-L, He S, Cavanagh P. Semantic priming from crowded words. Psychological Science, 2012, 23, pp.608-616. (PDF)
  • van Vugt FT, Cavanagh P. Erratum to: Response trajectories reveal conflict phase in image--Word mismatch. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 2012, 74, pp.1075.
  • Hein E, Cavanagh P. Motion correspondence in the Ternus display shows feature bias in spatiotopic coordinates. Journal of Vision, 2012, 12, pp.ArtID: 16. (PDF)
  • Cohen MA, Cavanagh P, Chun MM, Nakayama K. The attentional requirements of consciousness. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 2012, 16, pp.411-417. (PDF)
  • Butcher SJ, Cavanagh P. Familiarity does not affect the unilateral field advantage for repetition detection. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 2012, 74, pp.1216-1225. (PDF)
  • Kosovicheva AA, Maus GW, Anstis S, Cavanagh P, Tse PU, Whitney D. The motion-induced shift in the perceived location of a grating also shifts its aftereffect. Journal of Vision, 2012, 12, pp.ArtID: 7. (PDF)
  • Cohen MA, Cavanagh P, Chun MM, Nakayama K. Response to Tsuchiya et al.: Considering endogenous and exogenous attention. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 2012, 16, pp.528. (PDF)
  • Szinte M, Cavanagh P. Apparent Motion from Outside the Visual Field, Retinotopic Cortices May Register Extra-Retinal Positions. PLoS One, 2012, 7, pp.e47386.
  • Solomon AG, Cavanagh P, Gorea A. Recognition criteria vary with fluctuating uncertainty. Journal of Vision, 2012, 12, pp.1-13.
  • Szinte M, Wexler M, Cavanagh P. Temporal dynamics of remapping captured by peri-saccadic continuous motion. Journal of Vision, 2012, 12, pp.1-18.
  • Cavanagh P. Visual cognition. Vision Research, 2011, 51, pp.1538-1551. (PDF)
  • Toba M-N, Cavanagh P, Bartolomeo P. Attention biases the perceived midpoint of horizontal lines. Neuropsychologia, 2011, 49, pp.238-246. (PDF)
  • Stanley J, Forte JD, Cavanagh P, Carter O. Onset rivalry: The initial dominance phase is independent of ongoing perceptual alternations. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 2011, 5, pp.ArtID: 140. (PDF)
  • Hunt AR, Cavanagh P. Remapped visual masking. Journal of Vision, 2011, 11, pp.ArtID: 13. (PDF)
  • Rolfs M, Jonikaitis D, Deubel H, Cavanagh P. Predictive remapping of attention across eye movements. Nature Neuroscience, 2011, 14, pp.252-256. (PDF)
  • Allard R, Cavanagh P. Crowding in a detection task: External noise triggers change in processing strategy. Vision Research, 2011, 51, pp.408-416. (PDF)
  • Tse PU, Whitney D, Anstis S, Cavanagh P. Voluntary attention modulates motion-induced mislocalization. Journal of Vision, 2011, 11, pp.ArtID: 12. (PDF)
  • Sayim B, Cavanagh P. What line drawings reveal about the visual brain. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 2011, 5, pp.ArtID: 118. (PDF)
  • Vaziri-Pashkam M, Cavanagh P. Effect of speed overestimation on flash lag effect at low luminance. i-Perception, 2011, 2, pp.1063-1075.
  • Sayim B, Cavanagh P. The Art of Transparency. i-Perception, 2011, 2, pp.679-696. (PDF)
  • Szinte M, Cavanagh P. Spatiotopic apparent motion reveals local variations in space constancy. Journal of Vision, 2011, 11, pp.1-20.
  • Perdreau F, Cavanagh P. Do artists see their retinas?. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 2011, 5, pp.1-10.
  • Afraz A, Vaziri-Pashkam M, Cavanagh P. Spatial heterogeneity in the perception of face and form attributes. Current Biology, 2010, 20, pp.2112-2116. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Hunt A R, Afraz A, Rolfs M. Attentional Pointers: Response to Melcher. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 2010, 14, pp.474-475. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Hunt A R, Afraz A, Rolfs M. Attention Pointers: Response to Mayo and Sommer. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 2010, 14, pp.390-391. (PDF)
  • Rolfs M, Knapen T, Cavanagh P. Global saccadic adaptation. Vision Research, 2010, 50, pp.1882-1890.
  • Knapen T, Rolfs M, Wexler M, Cavanagh P. The reference frame of the tilt aftereffect. Journal of Vision, 2010, 10, pp.1-13.
  • Cavanagh P, Hunt A R, Afraz A, Rolfs M. Visual stability based on remapping of attention pointers. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 2010, 14, pp.147-153. (PDF)
  • Ito H, Anstis S, Cavanagh P. Illusory movement of dotted lines. Perception, 2009, 38, pp.1405-1409. (PDF)
  • Chakravarthi R, Cavanagh P. Recovery of a crowded object by masking the flankers: Determining the locus of feature integration. Journal of Vision, 2009, 9, pp.1-9.
  • Afraz S R, Cavanagh P. The gender-specific face aftereffect is based in retinotopic not spatiotopic coordinates across several natural image transformations. Journal of Vision, 2009, 9, pp.1-9.
  • Cavanagh P. All’s jazzy and unstable on the colour front: the impact of Gregory’s pioneering paper on vision at equiluminance. Perception, 2009, 38, pp.831-832. (PDF)
  • Chakravarthi R, Cavanagh P. Bilateral field advantage in visual crowding. Vision Research, 2009, 49, pp.1638-1646. (PDF)
  • Hunt AR, Cavanagh P. Looking ahead: The perceived direction of gaze shifts before the eyes move. Journal of Vision, 2009, 9, pp.ArtID: 1. (PDF)
  • Collins T, Rolfs M, Deubel H, Cavanagh P. Post-saccadic location judgments reveal remapping of saccade targets to non-foveal locations. Journal of Vision, 2009, 9(5):29, pp.1-9.
  • Knapen T, Rolfs M, Cavanagh P. The reference frame of the motion aftereffect is retinotopic. Journal of Vision, 2009, 9(5):16, pp.1-6.
  • Battelli L, Walsh V, Pascual-Leone A, Cavanagh P. The ’when’ parietal pathway explored by lesion studies. Current Opinion in Neurobiol.ogy, 2008, 18, pp.20-126. (PDF)
  • Vaziri-Pashkam M, Cavanagh P. Apparent speed increases at low luminance. Journal of Vision, 2008, 8, pp.1-12.
  • Afraz S R, Cavanagh P. Retinotopy of the face aftereffect. Vision Research, 2008, 48, pp.42-54. (PDF)
  • Butcher S, Cavanagh P. Unilateral field advantage for detecting repeated elements. Perception & Psychophysics, 2008, 70, pp.714-724. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Holcombe A O, Chou W. Mobile computation : spatiotemporal intregration of the properties of objects in motion. Journal of Vision, 2008, 8, pp.1-23.
  • Holcombe A O, Cavanagh P. Independent, synchronous access to color and motion features. Cognition, 2008, 107, pp.552-580. (PDF)
  • Pepperberg I M, Vicinay J, Cavanagh P. Processing of the Müller-Lyer illusion by a Grey parrot (Psittacus erithacus). Perception, 2008, 37, pp.765-781. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Chao J, Wang D. Reflections in art. Spatial Vision, 2008, 21, pp.261-270. (PDF)
  • Alvarez G A, Cavanagh P. Visual short-term memory operates more efficiently on boundary features than on surface features. Perception & Psychophysics, 2008, 70, pp.346-364. (PDF)
  • Carlson T A, Alvarez G A, Cavanagh P. Quadrantic deficit reveals anatomical constraints on selection. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2007, 104, pp.13496-13500. (PDF)
  • Van Rullen R, Carlson T, Cavanagh P. The blinking spotlight of attention. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2007, 104, pp.19204-19209. (PDF)
  • Pelli DG, Cavanagh P, Desimone R, Tjan B, Treisman A. Crowding: Including illusory conjunctions, surround suppression, and attention. Journal of Vision, 2007, 7, pp.1.
  • Battelli L, Pascual-Leone A, Cavanagh P. The ’when’ pathway of the right parietal lobe. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 2007, 11, pp.204-210. (PDF)
  • Aghdaee SM, Cavanagh P. Temporal limits of long-range phase discrimination across the visual field. Vision Research, 2007, 47, pp.2156-2163. (PDF)
  • Carter O, Cavanagh P. Onset rivalry: Brief presentation isolates an early independent phase of perceptual competition. PLoS ONE, 2007, 2, pp.e343. (PDF)
  • Tordjman S, Guignard JH, Seligmann C, Vanroye E, Nevoux G, Fagard J, Gorea A, Mamassian P, Cavanagh P, Lebreton S. Diagnosis of hyperactivity disorder in gifted children depends on observational sources. Gifted and Talented International, 2007, 22, pp.62-67.
  • Chakravarthi R, Cavanagh P. Temporal properties of the polarity advantage effect in crowding. Journal of Vision, 2007, 7, pp.1-13. (PDF)
  • Anstis S, Ito H, Cavanagh P. Background stripes affect apparent speed of rotation. Perception, 2006, 35, pp.959-964. (PDF)
  • Shim WM, Cavanagh P. Bi-directional illusory position shifts toward the end point of apparent motion. Vision Research, 2006, 46, pp.3214-3222. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. Les licences de Fra Carnavale. Pour la science, 2006, 16, pp.637-643. (PDF)
  • Ho C S, Paul P S, Asirvatham A, Cavanagh P, Cline R, Giaschi D E. Abnormal spatial selection and tracking in children with amblyopia. Vision Research, 2006, 46, pp.3274-3283. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. The artist as neuroscientist. Nature, 2005, 434, pp.301-307. (PDF)
  • Ostrovsky Y, Cavanagh P, Sinha P. Perceiving illumination inconsistencies in scenes. Perception, 2005, 34, pp.1301-1314. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Alvarez GA. Tracking multiple targets with multifocal attention. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 2005, 9, pp.349-354. (PDF)
  • Alvarez GA, Cavanagh P. Independent Resources for Attentional Tracking in the Left and Right Visual Hemifields. Psychological Science, 2005, 16, pp.637-643. (PDF)
  • Shim WM, Cavanagh P. Attentive tracking shifts the perceived location of a nearby flash. Vision Research, 2005, 45, pp.3253-3261. (PDF)
  • Rensink RA, Cavanagh P. The influence of cast shadows on visual search. Perception, 2004, 33, pp.1339-1358. (PDF)
  • Alvarez G A, Cavanagh P. The capacity of visual short-term memory is set both by visual information load and by number of objects. Psychological Science, 2004, 15, pp.106-111. (PDF)
  • Shim WM, Cavanagh P. The motion-induced position shift depends on the perceived direction of bistable quartet motion. Vision Research, 2004, 44, pp.2393-2401. (PDF)
  • Tse PU, Intriligator J, Rivest J, Cavanagh P. Attention and the subjective expansion of time. Perception & Psychophysics, 2004, 66, pp.1171-1189. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, vonGrünau M, Zimmerman L. View dependence of 3D recovery from folded pictures and warped 3D faces. IEEE Proceedings of the 2nd International Symposium on 3D Data Processing, Visualization, and Transm, 2004, pp.35-41. (PDF)
  • Battelli L, Cavanagh P, Thornton IM. Perception of biological motion in parietal patients. Neuropsychologia, 2003, 41, pp.1808-1816. (PDF)
  • Whitney D, Cavanagh P. Motion adaptation shifts apparent position without the motion aftereffect. Perception & Psychophysics, 2003, 65, pp.1011-1018. (PDF)
  • Battelli L, Cavanagh P, Martini P, Barton JJS. Bilateral deficits of transient visual attention in right parietal patients. Brain: A Journal of Neurology, 2003, 126, pp.2164-2174. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Anstis S. The boogie woogie illusion. Perception, 2002, 31, pp.1005-1011. (PDF)
  • Tripathy SP, Cavanagh P. The extent of crowding in peripheral vision does not scale with target size. Vision Research, 2002, 42, pp.2357-2369. (PDF)
  • Sasaki Y, Murakami I, Cavanagh P, Tootell R. Human brain activity during illusory visual jitter as revealed by functional magnetic resonance imaging. Neuron, 2002, 35, pp.1147-1156. (PDF)
  • Murakami I, Cavanagh P. Visual jitter: Evidence for visual-motion-based compensation of retinal slip due to small eye movements. Vision Research, 2001, 41, pp.173-186. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Labianca AT, Thornton IM. Attention-based visual routines: Sprites. Cognition, 2001, 80, pp.47-60. (PDF)
  • Intriligator J, Cavanagh P. The spatial resolution of visual attention. Cognitive Psychology, 2001, 43, pp.171-216. (PDF)
  • Battelli L, Cavanagh P, Intriligator J, Tramo MJ, Hénaff M-A, Michel F, Barton JJS. Unilateral right parietal damage leads to bilateral deficit for high-level motion. Neuron, 2001, 32, pp.985-995. (PDF)
  • Holcombe AO, Cavanagh P. Early binding of feature pairs for visual perception. Nature Neuroscience, 2001, 4, pp.127-128. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Barton JJS. Lights from beyond the visual field are not seen. Journal of Vision, 2001, 1, pp.129a.
  • Cavanagh P. Seeing the forest but not the trees (News and views). Nature Neuroscience, 2001, 4, pp.673-674. (PDF)
  • Culham JC, Cavanagh P, Kanwisher NG. Attention response functions: Characterizing brain areas with fmri activation during parametric variations of attentional load. Neuron, 2001, 32, pp.737-745. (PDF)
  • Whitney D, Cavanagh P, Murakami I. Temporal facilitation for moving stimuli is independent of changes in direction. Vision Research, 2000, 40, pp.3829-3839. (PDF)
  • Verstraten F AJ, Cavanagh P, Labianca AT. Limits of attentive tracking reveal temporal properties of attention. Vision Research, 2000, 40, pp.3651-3664. (PDF)
  • Shioiri S, Cavanagh P, Miyamoto T, Yaguchi H. Tracking the apparent location of targets in interpolated motion. Vision Research, 2000, 40, pp.1365-1376. (PDF)
  • Posner MI, Dehaene S, He S, Cavanagh P, Intriligator J, Volpe BT, Ledoux JE, Gazzaniga MS, Tipper SP, Driver J. Part III: Attention. Cognitive neuroscience: A reader., 2000, pp.153-187.
  • Tse PU, Cavanagh P. Chinese and Americans see opposite apparent motions in a Chinese character. Cognition, 2000, 74, pp.B27-B32. (PDF)
  • Shioiri S, Cavanagh P. Nonlinearity in color space measured by apparent motion. Perception & Psychophysics, 2000, 62, pp.1182-1190. (PDF)
  • Whitney DV, Cavanagh P. Motion distorts visual space: Shifting the perceived position of remote stationary objects. Nature Neuroscience, 2000, 3, pp.954-959. (PDF)
  • Whitney DV, Murakami I, Cavanagh P. Illusory spatial offset of a flash relative to a moving stimulus is caused by differential latencies for moving and flashed stimuli. Vision Research, 2000, 40, pp.137-149. (PDF)
  • Culham JC, Verstraten FAJ, Ashida H, Cavanagh P. Independent aftereffects of attention and motion. Neuron, 2000, pp.607-615. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Kennedy JM. Close Encounters: Details Veto Depth from Shadows. Science (Letters), 2000, 287, pp.2423-2424. (PDF)
  • Whitney DV, Cavanagh P. The position of moving objects. Science (Technical Comments), 2000, 289, pp.1107. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. Consciousness: A Look at the Left-Brain ’Interpreter’. PsycCRITIQUES, 1999, 44, pp.396-397.
  • Seiffert AE, Cavanagh P. Position-based motion perception for color and texture stimuli: Effects of contrast and speed. Vision Research, 1999, 39, pp.4172-4185. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. The cognitive Impenetrability of Cognition: Commentary on Pylyshyn. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 1999, 22, pp.370-371. (PDF)
  • Murakami I, Cavanagh P. A jitter after-effect reveals motion-based stabilization of vision. Nature, 1998, 395, pp.798-801. (PDF)
  • Anstis S, Hutahajan P, Cavanagh P. Optomotor test for wavelength sensitivity in guppyfish (Poecilia reticulata). Vision Research, 1998, 38, pp.45-53. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Henaff M-A, Michel F, Landis T, Troscianki T, Intriligator J. Complete sparing of high-contrast color input to motion perception in cortical color blindness. Nature Neuroscience, 1998, 1, pp.242-247. (PDF)
  • Hadjikhani N, Liu AK, Dale AM, Cavanagh P, Tootell RBH. Retinotopy and color sensitivity in human visual cortical area V8. Nature Neuroscience, 1998, 1, pp.235-241. (PDF)
  • Moore C, Cavanagh P. Recovery of 3D volume from 2-tone images of novel objects. Cognition, 1998, 67, pp.45-71. (PDF)
  • Suzuki S, Cavanagh P. A shape-contrast effect for briefly presented stimuli. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1998, 24, pp.1315-1341. (PDF)
  • Seiffert AE, Cavanagh P. Position displacement, not velocity, is the cue to motion detections of second-order stimuli. Vision Research, 1998, 38, pp.3569-3582. (PDF)
  • Culham JC, Brandt SA, Cavanagh P, Kanwisher NG, Dale AM, Tootell RBH. Cortical fMRI activation produced by attentive tracking of moving targets. Journal of Neurophysiology, 1998, 80, pp.2657-2670. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. Predicting the present. Nature, 1997, 386, pp.19-21. (PDF)
  • Chun MM, Cavanagh P. Seeing two as one: Linking apparent motion and repetition blindness. Psychological Science, 1997, 8, pp.74-79. (PDF)
  • Suzuki S, Cavanagh P. Focused attention distorts visual space: An attentional repulsion effect. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1997, 23, pp.443-463. (PDF)
  • He S, Cavanagh P, Intriligator J. Attentional resolution. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 1997, 1, pp.115-121. (PDF)
  • Culham JC, Cavanagh P. Motion capture of luminance stimuli by equiluminous color gratings and by attentive tracking: Reply. Vision Research, 1996, 36, pp.79-80.
  • Rivest J, Cavanagh P. Localizing contours defined by more than one attribute. Vision Research, 1996, 36, pp.53-66. (PDF)
  • West M, Spillmann L, Cavanagh P, Mollon J, Hamlin S. Susanne Liebmann in the critical zone. Perception, 1996, 25, pp.1451-1495. (PDF)
  • Watanabe T, Cavanagh P. Texture laciness: The texture equivalent of transparency?. Perception, 1996, 25, pp.293-303. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. When colours move. Nature, 1996, 379, pp.26. (PDF)
  • Hayduk S, Bruck M, Cavanagh P. Low-level visual processing skills of adults and children with dyslexia. Cognitive Neuropsychology, 1996, 13, pp.975-1015. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. Attention-based visual processes. Canadian Psychology/Psychologie Canadienne, 1996, 37, pp.59.
  • He S, Cavanagh P, Intriligator J. Attentional resolution and the locus of visual awareness. Nature, 1996, 383, pp.334-337. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. Vision is getting easier every day. Perception, 1996, 24, pp.1227-1232.
  • Zimmerman GL, Legge GE, Cavanagh P. Pictorial depth cues: A new slant. Journal of the Optical Society of America, A, Optics, Image Science & Vision, 1995, 12, pp.17-26. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Saida S, Rivest J. The contribution of color to depth perceived from motion parallax. Vision Research, 1995, 35, pp.1871-1878. (PDF)
  • Suzuki S, Cavanagh P. Facial organization blocks access to low-level features: An object inferiority effect. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1995, 21, pp.901-913. (PDF)
  • Selter S, Cavanagh P. Enhanced displays of medical images: Evaluation of the effectiveness of color, motion and contour for detection and localization of liver lesions. Academic Radiology, 1995, 2, pp.748-755. (PDF)
  • Rivest J, Cavanagh P, Lassonde M. Interhemispheric depth judgement. Neuropsychologia, 1994, 32, pp.69-76. (PDF)
  • Arguin M, Cavanagh P, Joanette Y. Visual feature integration with an attention deficit. Brain and Cognition, 1994, 24, pp.44-56. (PDF)
  • Watanabe T, Cavanagh P. Transparent surfaces defined by implicit X junctions: Erratum. Vision Research, 1994, 34, pp.974.
  • Culham JC, Cavanagh P. Motion capture of luminance stimuli by equiluminous color gratings and by attentive tracking. Vision Research, 1994, 34, pp.2701-2706. (PDF)
  • Wang Q, Cavanagh P, Green M. Familiarity and pop-out in visual search. Perception & Psychophysics, 1994, 56, pp.495-500. (PDF)
  • Watanabe T, Cavanagh P. Surface decomposition accompanying the perception of transparency. Spatial Vision, 1993, 7, pp.95-111. (PDF)
  • Arguin M, Joanette Y, Cavanagh P. Visual search for feature and conjunction targets with an attention deficit. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 1993, 5, pp.436-452. (PDF)
  • Watanabe T, Cavanagh P. Transparent surfaces defined by implicit X junctions. Vision Research, 1993, 33, pp.2339-2346. (PDF)
  • Arguin M, Cavanagh P, Joanette Y. A lateralized alerting deficit in left brain-damaged patients. Psychobiology, 1993, 21, pp.307-323. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. The perception of form and motion. Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 1993, 3, pp.177-182. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Adelson EH, Heard P. Vision with equiluminant colour contrast: II. A large-scale technique and observations. Perception, 1992, 21, pp.219-226. (PDF)
  • Watanabe T, Cavanagh P. The role of transparency in perceptual grouping and pattern recognition. Perception, 1992, 21, pp.133-139. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. Multiple analyses of orientation in the visual system. Frontiers in cognitive neuroscience, 1992, pp.52-61.
  • Watanabe T, Cavanagh P. Depth capture and transparency of regions bounded by illusory and chromatic contours. Vision Research, 1992, 32, pp.527-532. (PDF)
  • Shioiri S, Cavanagh P. Visual persistence of figures defined by relative motion. Vision Research, 1992, 32, pp.943-951. (PDF)
  • Jolicoeur P, Cavanagh P. Mental rotation, physical rotation, and surface media. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1992, 18, pp.371-384. (PDF)
  • Watanabe T, Zimmerman GL, Cavanagh P. Orientation-contingent color aftereffects mediated by subjective transparent structures. Perception & Psychophysics, 1992, 52, pp.161-166. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. Attention-based motion perception. Science, 1992, 257, pp.1563-1565. (PDF)
  • Shioiri S, Cavanagh P. Achromatic form perception is based on luminance, not brightness. Journal of the Optical Society of America, A, Optics, Image and Science, 1992, 9, pp.1672-1681. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Anstis S. The contribution of color to motion in normal and color-deficient observers. Vision Research, 1991, 31, pp.2109-2148. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. Short-range vs long-range motion: Not a valid distinction. Spatial Vision, 1991, 5, pp.303-309. (PDF)
  • Tyler CW, Cavanagh P. Purely chromatic perception of motion in depth: Two eyes as sensitive as one. Perception & Psychophysics, 1991, 49, pp.53-61. (PDF)
  • Bruck M, Cavanagh P, Ceci SJ. Fortysomething: Recognizing faces at one’s 25th reunion. Memory and Cognition, 1991, 19, pp.221-228. (PDF)
  • Watanabe T, Cavanagh P. Texture and motion spreading, the aperture problem, and transparency. Perception & Psychophysics, 1991, 50, pp.459-464. (PDF)
  • Treisman A, Cavanagh P, Fischer B, Ramachandran V S, vonderHeydt R. Form perception and attention: Striate cortex and beyond. Visual perception: The neurophysiological foundations, 1990, pp.273-316.
  • Flanagan P, Cavanagh P, Favreau OE. Independent orientation-selective mechanisms for the cardinal directions of colour space. Vision Research, 1990, 30, pp.769-778. (PDF)
  • Shioiri S, Cavanagh P. ISI produces reverse apparent motion. Vision Research, 1990, 30, pp.757-768. (PDF)
  • Arguin M, Joanette Y, Cavanagh P. Comparing the cerebral hemispheres on the speed of spatial shifts of visual attention: Evidence from serial search. Neuropsychologia, 1990, 28, pp.733-736. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Arguin M, Treisman A. Effect of surface medium on visual search for orientation and size features. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1990, 16, pp.479-491. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Leclerc Yvan G. Shape from shadows: Correction to Cavanagh and Leclerc (1989). Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1990, 16, pp.910.
  • Maurer D, Lewis T L, Cavanagh P, Anstis S. A new test of luminous efficiency for babies. Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science, 1989, 30, pp.297-303. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Arguin M, vonGrunau M. Interattribute apparent motion. Vision Research, 1989, 29, pp.1197-1204. (PDF)
  • Shioiri S, Cavanagh P. Saccadic suppression of low-level motion. Vision Research, 1989, 29, pp.915-928. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Mather G. Motion: The long and short of it. Spatial Vision, 1989, 4, pp.103-129. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Leclerc YG. Shape from shadows. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1989, 15, pp.3-27. (PDF)
  • Maurer D, Lewis T, Cavanagh P, Antis SM. Testing the luminous efficiency of color in babies. Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science, 1989, pp.297-303.
  • Shiori S, Cavanagh P. Classification of motion perception. Kogaku, 1989, 18, pp.516-523. (PDF)
  • Lassonde M, Perenin MT, Tassinari G, Corbetta M, Cavanagh P. Central mechanisms of stereopsis in man. Advances in the Biosciences, 1988, 70, pp.95-98. (PDF)
  • Murasugi CM, Cavanagh P. Anisotropy in the chromatic channel: A horizontal-vertical effect. Spatial Vision, 1988, 3, pp.281-291. (PDF)
  • Arguin M, Cavanagh P. Parallel processing of two disjunctive targets. Perception & Psychophysics, 1988, 44, pp.22-30. (PDF)
  • Frost BJ, Cavanagh P, Morgan B. Deep tectal cells in pigeons respond to kinematograms. Journal of comparative Physiology A, 1988, 162, pp.639-647. (PDF)
  • Gaska JP, Pollen DA, Cavanagh P. Diversity of complex cell responses to even- and odd-symmetric luminance profiles in the visual cortex of the cat. Experimental Brain Research, 1987, 68, pp.249-259. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. Reconstructing the third dimension: Interactions between color, texture, motion, binocular disparity and shape. Computer Vision, Graphics and Image Processing, 1987, 37, pp.171-195. (PDF)
  • Antis SM, Cavanagh P, Maurer D, Lewis T. Optokinetic technique for measuring infant’s responses to color. Applied Optics, 1987, 27, pp.1510-1516. (PDF)
  • Ramachandran VS, Cavanagh P. Motion capture anisotropy. Vision Research, 1987, 27, pp.97-106. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, MacLeod DI, Anstis SM. Equiluminance: Spatial and temporal factors and the contribution of blue-sensitive cones. Journal of the Optical Society of America, A, Optics, Image and Science, 1987, 4, pp.1428-1438. (PDF)
  • Antis SM, Cavanagh P, Maurer D, Lewis T, MacLeod DIA, Mather G. Computer-generated screening test for colorblindness. Color Research and Application Suppl., 1986, 11, pp.S63-S66. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Anstis SM. Brightness shift in drifting ramp gratings isolates a transient mechanism. Vision Research, 1986, 26, pp.899-908. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. Local log polar frequency analysis in the striate cortex as a basis for size and orientation invariance. Models of the visual cortex., 1985, pp.85-95. (PDF)
  • Zucker SW, Cavanagh P. Subjective figures and texture perception. Spatial Vision, 1985, 1, pp.131-139. (PDF)
  • Meunier J, Cavanagh P. Efficacité de la mémoire associative inhérente à la potentiation post-tétanique. Biological Cybernetics, 1985, 52, pp.159-171.
  • Cavanagh P, Favreau OE. Color and luminance share a common motion pathway. Vision Research, 1985, 25, pp.1595-1601. (PDF)
  • Mather G, Cavanagh P, Anstis SM. A moving display which opposes short-range and long-range signals. Perception, 1985, 14, pp.163-166. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Boeglin J, Favreau OE. Perception of motion in equiluminous kinematograms. Perception, 1985, 14, pp.151-162. (PDF)
  • Ramachandran Vilayanur S, Cavanagh P. Subjective contours capture stereopsis. Nature, 1985, 317, pp.527-530. (PDF)
  • Pollen DA, Nagler M, Daugman J, Kronauer R, Cavanagh P. Use of Gabor elementary functions to probe receptive field substructure of posterior inferotemporal neurons in the owl monkey. Vision Research, 1984, 24, pp.233-241. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Anstis SM, Mather G. Screening for color blindness using optokinetic nystagmus. Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science, 1984, 25, pp.463-466.
  • Brussell EM, Cavanagh P. An anticipated threshold technique for measuring contrast sensitivity. American Journal of Optometry and Physiological Optics, 1984, 61, pp.125-126. (PDF)
  • Favreau OE, Cavanagh P. Interocular transfer of a chromatic frequency shift: Temporal constraints. Vision Research, 1984, 24, pp.1799-1805. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Tyler CW, Favreau OE. Perceived velocity of moving chromatic gratings. Journal of the Optical Society of America, A, Optics, Image and Science, 1984, 1, pp.893-899. (PDF)
  • Menard-Buteau C, Cavanagh P. Localisation de l’interference forme/couleur au niveau perceptuel dans une tache de type Stroop avec des stimuli-dessins. Canadian Journal of Psychology/Revue Canadienne de Psychologie, 1984, 38, pp.421-439. (PDF)
  • Favreau Olga E, Cavanagh Patrick. Interocular transfer of a chromatic frequency shift. Vision Research, 1983, 23, pp.951-957. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. Functional size invariance is not provided by the cortical magnification factor. Vision Research, 1982, 22, pp.1409-1412. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. Size invariance: Reply to Schwartz. Perception, 1981, 10, pp.469-474. (PDF)
  • Favreau OE, Cavanagh P. Color and luminance: Independent frequency shifts. Science, 1981, 212, pp.831-832. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Brussell EM, Stober SR. Evidence against independent processing of black and white pattern features. Perception & Psychophysics, 1981, 29, pp.423-428. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Favreau OE. Motion aftereffect: A global mechanism for the perception of rotation. Perception, 1980, 9, pp.175-182. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Anstis SM. Visual psychophysics on the APPLE II: Getting started. Behavior Research Methods & Instrumentation, 1980, 12, pp.614-626. (PDF)
  • Anstis SM, Cavanagh P. Adaptation to frequency-shifted auditory feedback. Perception & Psychophysics, 1979, 26, pp.449-458. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. Subharmonics in adaptation to sine wave gratings. Vision Research, 1978, 18, pp.741-742. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. Size and position invariance in the visual system. Perception, 1978, 7, pp.167-177. (PDF)
  • Gagnon M, Cavanagh P, Laurencelle L. Processing differences between memory search and foveal visual search. Perception & Psychophysics, 1978, 23, pp.258-260. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. Locus of rotation effects in recognition. Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society, 1977, 10, pp.101-104. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. Holographic and trace strength models of rehearsal effects in the item recognition task. Memory and Cognition, 1976, 4, pp.186-199. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. Holographic processes realizable in the neural realm: Prediction of short term memory performance. Dissertation Abstracts International: Section B: The Sciences and Engineering, 1973, 33, pp.3280.
  • Cavanagh P, Parkman JM. Search processes for detecting repeated items in a visual display. Perception & Psychophysics, 1972, 11, pp.43-45. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P. Relation between the immediate memory span and the memory search rate. Psychological Review, 1972, 79, pp.525-530. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Parkman J. A comparison of the study-recall and anticipation methods in steady state paired-associates learning. Psychonomic Science, 1971, 22, pp.361-363. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, Chase WG. The equivalence of target and nontarget processing in visual search. Perception & Psychophysics, 1971, 9, pp.493-495. (PDF)

Chapters

  • Cavanagh P, , He S. Attention mechanisms for counting in stabilized and dynamic displays. Space Time and Number, Attention ,Performance XXIV, Elizabeth Brannon and Stanislas Dehaene - Oxford University Press, pp.23-40, 2011. (PDF)
  • Melcher D, Cavanagh P. Pictorial cues in art and in visual perception. Art and the senses., Francesca Bacci and David Melcher - Oxford University Press, pp.359-394, 2011. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh P, , VanRullen R. La résolution de l’attention: le grain spatial et temporal de la conscience visuelle. Neuroscience cognitive de l’attention visuelle, George Michael - Solal, 2007. (PDF)
  • Cavanagh Patrick. Attention Routines and the Architecture of Selection. Cognitive neuroscience of attention., Posner Michael I. - Guilford Press, pp.13-28, 2004.
  • Cavanagh P. The language of vision. The Perception 2003 Lecture. ECVP. Perception, pp.1-2003.
  • Cavanagh P. Top-down processing in vision. MIT Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science, Robert A. Wilson, ,Frank C. Keil - MIT Press, pp.844-845, 1999.
  • Cavanagh P. Pictorial art and vision. MIT Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science, Robert A. Wilson, ,Frank C. Keil - MIT Press, pp.648-651, 1999.
  • Cavanagh P. Attention: Exporting vision to the mind. Neuronal basis and psychological aspects of consciousness, C. Taddei-Ferretti, ,C. Musio - World Scientific, pp.129-143, 1999.
  • Cavanagh P, He S, , Intriligator J. Attentional resolution: The grain and locus of visual awareness. Neuronal basis and psychological aspects of consciousness, C. Taddei-Ferretti, ,C. Musio - World Scientific, pp.41-52, 1999.
  • Cavanagh P. Attention: Exporting vision to the mind. Selection and integration of visual information, S. Saida, ,P. Cavanagh - STA ,NIBH-T, pp.3-11, 1998.
  • Culham J, Nishida S, Ledgeway T, Cavanagh P, vonGrunau M, Kwas M, Alais D, , Raymond J. Higher-order effects. The motion aftereffect: A modern perspective., Mather, George ,Verstraten, Frans ,Anstis, Stuar - The MIT Press, pp.85-124, 1998.
  • Tse Peter, Cavanagh Patrick, Nakayama Ken. The role of parsing in high-level motion processing. High-level motion processing: Computational, neurobiological, and psychophysical perspectives., Watanabe, Takeo - The MIT Press, pp.249-266, 1998.
  • Cavanagh Patrick. Is there low-level motion processing for non-luminance-based stimuli?. Early vision and beyond., Papathomas, Thomas V. ,Chubb, Charles ,Gorea, An - The MIT Press, pp.113-119, 1995.
  • Cavanagh P, Michel F, Hénaff M-A, , Landis T. Cortical colour blindness spares colour input to motion perception. New horizon in neuropsychology, M. Sugishita - Elsevier, pp.115-123, 1994.
  • Cavanagh P. Vision at equiluminance. Vision and Visual Dysfunction Volume V: Limits of Vision, J.J. Kulikowski IJ. Murray, ,V. Walsh - CRC Press, pp.234-250, 1991.
  • Cavanagh P. What’s up in top-down processing?. Representations of Vision: Trends and Tacit Assumptions in Vision Research, A. Gorea - Cambridge University Press, pp.295-304, 1991.
  • Cavanagh P. The contribution of color to motion. From pigments to perception, A. Valberg, ,B.B. Lee - Plenum, pp.151-164, 1991.
  • Treisman A, Cavanagh P, Gregory RL, Gruesser OJ, Ramachandran VS, , vonderHeydt R. The perception of form: Striate cortex and beyond. Neurophysiological foundations of visual perception, Lothar Spillman, ,John S. Warner - 1989.
  • Cavanagh P. Multiple analyses of orientation in visual system. Neural Mechanisms of Visual Perception, Dominic Lam, ,Charles Gilbert - Portfolio Publishing, pp.261-280, 1989.
  • Cavanagh P. Pathways in early vision. Computational processes in human vision: An interdisciplinary prespective, Zenon Pylyshyn - Ablex, pp.254-289, 1988.
  • Cavanagh P. Image transforms in the visual system. Figural Synthesis, P.C. Dodwel, ,T. Caelli - Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, pp.185-218, 1984.
  • Antis SM, , Cavanagh P. A minimum motion technique for judging equiluminance. Colour vision: Psychophysics and physiology, J.D. Mollon, ,L.T. Sharpe - Academic Press, pp.66-77, 1983.
  • Antis SM, , Cavanagh P. What goes up need not come down: Moving flicker edges give positive motion aftereffects. Attention and performance IX, J.B. Long, ,A.D. Baddeley - pp.63-78, 1981.
  • Cavanagh P. Two classes of holographic processes realizable in the neural realm. Formal Aspects of Cognitive Processes, T. Storer, ,D. Winter - Springer-Verlag, pp.14-40, 1975.

Report

  • Wainwright M, Cavanagh P. Static and flicker motion aftereffects in a velocity space. Unpublished manuscript of ARVO 1997. 1998.