Episode Synopsis "Julie Golomb looks at how our brains make sense of the world"
Julie Golomb, associate professor of psychology, researches the interactions between visual perception, attention, memory, and eye movements using human behavioral and computational cognitive neuroscience techniques. She's especially interested in questions like, "How do our brains convert patterns of light into rich perceptual experiences, and what can we learn from perceptual errors?" For more of her discussion with David Staley, listen to this week's Voices of Excellence
Listen "Julie Golomb looks at how our brains make sense of the world"
More episodes of the podcast Voices of Excellence from Arts and Sciences
- Are your political views hereditary? Skylar Cranmer's brain scan research suggests it is
- How do cells make decisions?: Adriana Dawes has answers
- Andrea Sims on what can and can't be a word
- "I fell in love with mountain glaciers as a mountaineer," Bryan Mark
- Julie Golomb looks at how our brains make sense of the world