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Experimental Psychology Seminar - Andrew Meso, KCL

09 January 2024, 1:00 pm–3:00 pm

Dr Andrew Meso

Dr Andrew Meso, Kings College London, joins us to discuss the impact and importance of psychophysical research.

Event Information

Open to

All

Organiser

Antonietta Esposito

Location

Room 500
25 Gordon Street
London
wc1h 0ay

Location:
Room 500, 25 Gordon Street
 
Zoom :
https://ucl.zoom.us/j/92985972281?pwd=MS9PSzdpUStoNFpkQXVsQUVGbDRxdz09
Meeting ID: 929 8597 2281 Passcode: 224269

Abstract: 


I am part of a dwindling number of researchers who still use simplified visual psychophysical tasks (gratings, dots or when splashing out - luminance noise) alongside eye movement recordings and theory, to shed light on sensory mechanisms. I will first present theoretical work which asks whether Elementary Motion Detectors initially proposed for insect vision could serve human visual perception and predict interesting perceptual phenomena. I will then discuss results of a ball tracking task which taps into global mechanisms and isolates potentially learned from hard wired predictive signatures of sensorimotor processing. I will argue that such 'boring' tasks provide a high precision probe that can contribute to building better models of the typical and atypical sensory brain.

About the Speaker

Andrew Meso

Researcher at Kings College London

I am a computational neuroscientist and experimental psychologist interested in vision science who works in the neuroimaging department at King's. I don't really do any imaging, but I tell KCL that I will, one day. I have previously held a lectureship at Bournemouth University, and did long postdocs in Marseille, France and Montreal, Canada, within multidisciplinary Neuroscience and Ophthalmology labs. My early studies were in the University of London where I covered Physics, Medical physics then Comp Neuro/Experimental Psych and this included a spell at UCL.