Stanford Vision and Perception Neuroscience Lab
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stanfordvpnl.bsky.social
Stanford Vision and Perception Neuroscience Lab
@stanfordvpnl.bsky.social
Our research utilizes multimodal imaging, computational modeling, and behavioral measurements to investigate human visual cortex.

PI: Dr. Kalanit Grill-Spector.

More at: http://vpnl.stanford.edu/#/
Reposted by Stanford Vision and Perception Neuroscience Lab
NEW EPISODE!! 💫 (and the first in our new series, Psychologist in the Wild) Elizabeth
@imelizabeth.bsky.social
chats with Dr. Dawn Finzi on her scientific journey, from researching human visual perception to becoming a Machine Learning Engineer! LISTEN NOW🎧: open.spotify.com/episode/1TTH...
159 - Dawn Finzi: From Vision Neuroscience to ML Engineering (Psychologist in the Wild Series)
open.spotify.com
October 17, 2025 at 9:28 PM
Reposted by Stanford Vision and Perception Neuroscience Lab
Curious how infant brains fold?
I’m excited to share our new study spearheaded by Sarah Tung and Vaidehi Natu now on bioRxiv!
www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
Sarah and Vaidehi examined how the grooves of the brain (sulci) develop in individual infant’s brain during the first year of life.
How infant brains fold: Sulcal deepening is linked to development of sulcal span, thickness, curvature, and microstructure
Cortical folding begins in utero as sulci emerge and continues postnatally as sulci deepen. However, the timeline and mechanisms underlying postnatal sulcal development remain unknown. Using structura...
www.biorxiv.org
April 24, 2025 at 9:59 PM
Reposted by Stanford Vision and Perception Neuroscience Lab
Excited to share on my first post on Bluesky our new paper in NHB examine the innate and developing aspects of the wiring of the visual system. Congratulations to @emilykubota.bsky.social and the baby MRI team on this important work
March 21, 2025 at 6:08 PM
Reposted by Stanford Vision and Perception Neuroscience Lab
Check out Nicolas Weiler’s article for Stanford Neurosciences on how our work is bridging nature and nurture!
Bridging Nature and Nurture: Study reveals brain's flexible foundation from
By studying never-before-seen details of brain connectivity in human infants, researchers at the Wu Tsai
neuroscience.stanford.edu
March 17, 2025 at 5:28 PM
Reposted by Stanford Vision and Perception Neuroscience Lab