Call for Papers: Special Issue: Neuroimaging in Vision Science


Neuroimaging in Vision Science

The past decade has seen rapid growth in the use of imaging techniques to study the human brain. In the case of vision research, the firm foundation provided by several decades of detailed psychophysics and neurophysiology has permitted rapid progress in defining the various visual areas of the human brain, establishing the nature of the visual information processing that occurs within them and examining non-retinal influences such as attention, mental imagery and input from the other sense systems.

The Journal of Vision plans a special issue on imaging the human visual system and invites the submission of original research articles describing work using brain imaging techniques to advance our understanding of any aspect of human visual processing. Imaging is defined broadly, to include all the following methodologies:

  • Magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI, DTI)
  • Magnetoencephalography (MEG)
  • Electroencephalography (EEG)
  • Optical imaging of visual cortex

Guest Editors:

Andy Smith Royal Holloway, University of London, UK a.t.smith@rhul.ac.uk
David Heeger New York University, USA david.heeger@nyu.edu

Geoff Boynton

University of Washington, USA gboynton@u.washington.edu
Tony Norcia Smith-Kettlewell Eye Research Institute, USA amn@ski.org

Deadline for submissions:

December 15, 2007

Target publication date:

June, 2008

PDF of this Call for Papers

Journal of Vision is an online, open-access journal that encourages the use of images, color, movies, hyperlinks, and other digital enhancements. To submit a paper to this special issue please follow the Instructions for Authors.




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