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| ====== Jie Huang ====== | ====== Jie Huang ====== | ||
| - | ==== Postdoctoral Associate, Rosenholtz Lab ==== | + | ==== Postdoctoral Associate ==== |
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| Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences \\ | Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences \\ | ||
| 43 Vassar Street \\ | 43 Vassar Street \\ | ||
| - | Building 46 \\ | ||
| MIT, 46-4115 \\ | MIT, 46-4115 \\ | ||
| Cambridge, MA 02139\\ | Cambridge, MA 02139\\ | ||
| - | webpage: http://web.mit.edu/jiehuang/www/Home.html\\ | ||
| - | email: jiehuang at mit dot edu\\ | ||
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| + | Webpage: http://web.mit.edu/jiehuang/www/Home.html\\ | ||
| + | Email: jiehuang at mit dot edu\\ | ||
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| Jie is a Postdoctoral Associate in the Perceptual Science Group @ MIT, working with Dr Ruth Rosenholtz. Her present work investigates peripheral vision and the related perceptual and cognitive functions, e.g. visual search, crowding, attentional allocation and visual-short memory. | Jie is a Postdoctoral Associate in the Perceptual Science Group @ MIT, working with Dr Ruth Rosenholtz. Her present work investigates peripheral vision and the related perceptual and cognitive functions, e.g. visual search, crowding, attentional allocation and visual-short memory. | ||
| - | She received my PhD in Cognitive Neuroscience in 2010 from Brandeis University. She worked with Dr Robert Sekuler in Vision Lab and studied visual short-term memory and visual attention. She utilized both behavioral, computational modeling and electrophysiological techniques to assess the fidelity of visual short-term memory for stimuli as simple as Gabor patches, as well as more complex stimuli such as synthetic faces and unfamiliar Mandarin names. | + | She received my PhD in Cognitive Neuroscience in 2010 from Brandeis University, where she studied visual short-term memory and visual attention. She utilized both behavioral, computational modeling and electrophysiological techniques to assess the fidelity of visual short-term memory for stimuli as simple as Gabor patches, as well as more complex stimuli such as synthetic faces and unfamiliar Mandarin names. |
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