Pylyshyn: Vision and cognition
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Binary oppositions and what focuses in focal attention
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- 01 June 1999, pp. 383-384
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Better ways to study penetrability with detection theory
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- 01 June 1999, p. 384
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Defining perception and cognition
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- 01 June 1999, p. 385
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Cognitive impenetrability of early vision does not imply cognitive impenetrability of perception
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- 01 June 1999, pp. 385-386
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Seeing beyond the modules toward the subject of perception
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- 01 June 1999, pp. 386-387
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How does low level vision interact with knowledge?
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- 01 June 1999, pp. 387-388
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Is perception of 3-D surface configurations cognitively penetrable?
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- 01 June 1999, pp. 388-389
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Knowledge and intention can penetrate early vision
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- 01 June 1999, pp. 389-390
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Cognitive penetration: Would we know it if we saw it?
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- 01 June 1999, pp. 390-391
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Is visual recognition entirely impenetrable?
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- 01 June 1999, pp. 391-392
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The future of vision needs more bridges and fewer walls
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- 01 June 1999, pp. 392-393
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Color memory penetrates early vision
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- 01 June 1999, p. 393
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The case for cognitive penetrability
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- 01 June 1999, pp. 394-395
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Perception, inference, and the veridicality of natural constraints
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- 01 June 1999, pp. 395-396
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Attentive selection penetrates (almost) the entire visual system
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- 01 June 1999, p. 397
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Expert perceivers and perceptual learning
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- 01 June 1999, pp. 396-397
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Can we answer the unanswerable?
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- 01 June 1999, pp. 397-398
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Segregation and integration of information among visual modules
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- 01 June 1999, pp. 398-399
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Is early visual processing attention impenetrable?
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- 01 June 1999, p. 400
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An ecological approach to cognitive (im)penetrability
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- 01 June 1999, pp. 399-400
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