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Brief Communication
Nature Neuroscience 10, 423–425 (1 April 2007) | doi:10.1038/nn1874
Neural mechanisms for timing visual events are spatially selective in real-world coordinates
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Abstract
It is generally assumed that perceptual events are timed by a centralized supramodal clock. This study challenges this notion in humans by providing clear evidence that visual events of subsecond duration are timed by visual neural mechanisms with spatially circumscribed receptive fields, localized in real-world, rather than retinal, coordinates.
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