Undergraduate Students
Many of these undergraduates worked with us through
the NYU Center for Neural Science Summer Undergraduate Research Program
(SURP) which is
supported by the NSF and every year brings about a dozen students here
from other universities for an intense 10-week summer program.
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Olivia A. Jack (2014-2015). Honors thesis: "Differences in Online and Printed Newspapers: Perceived Advertisement Intrusiveness and Article Credibility". Awarded DURF grant. BA in Psychology at NYU 2015. |
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Deborah Levy (2013-2014). Honor's thesis. BA in Psychology at NYU 2013. |
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Wendy Schnebelen (2010-2011). BA in Psychology at NYU 2011. |
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Elizabeth
Grand (2009-2010). BA in Psychology at NYU 2010. |
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Nathaniel Blanco (2008-2009 ) Legibility. Majoring in
Psychology, NYU. |
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Alissa Cantone (2007-2008) "Why does eccentricity
affect reading rate?" BA in Psychology, NYU, 2007.
Cantone, Tillman, & Pelli (2008).
Eccentric features integrate slowly [Abstract]. Journal
of Vision. |
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Jeremy Freeman (summer 2006 SURP & Leadership
Alliance) Freeman & Pelli (2007) An
escape from crowding. Journal
of Vision. BA
Swarthmore 2008. Goldwater Scholar
for 2007 (up to $7,500), selected
on the basis
of academic merit from a field of 1,110 mathematics, science, and
engineering students who were nominated by the faculties of colleges
and universities nationwide. Now graduate student in Neural Science
at NYU. |
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Jordan Suchow (summer 2009; summer 2008; summer 2007; summer 2006 SURP & Leadership
Alliance) "Learning
letters." BA Brandeis 2009. Suchow & Pelli
(2008). Letter learning: Feature detection and integration [Abstract]. Journal
of Vision. Suchow &
Pelli (submitted) "Learning to detect and combine the features of an object". Now graduate student in Psychology at Harvard University with George Alvarez. |
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Shirley Poyau (2006) "Crowding of reading." |
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Kathleen Fourte (2005-2006) "Spatiotemporal
crowding in reading." |
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Momosuke Araki (2005-ongoing) Honors thesis: "Bodies
are processed as wholes for emotion recognition." Graduated
with honors in Psychology, NYU, 2007. |
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Jeffrey Stott (summer 2005 SURP) “Spatial and
temporal crowding in the recognition of words and faces.” Interned
in Nick's
zebra finch lab at the University of Minnesota.
In fall 2006 worked on
epilepsy therapeutics in the lab of Dr.
Michael Rogawski, Chief, Epilepsy Research Section, NINDS. |
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Katharine Tillman (2004-ongoing) Lab manager. Pelli & Tillman
(2007) Parts, wholes, and context in reading: A triple dissociation. PLoS
ONE. Pelli, Tillman, Freeman,
Su, Berger, & Majaj (2007) Crowding and eccentricity
determine reading rate. Journal
of Vision. Pelli & Tillman
(2008) The uncrowded window of object recognition. Nature
Neuroscience. |
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Shuang Guo (2004-2005) Honors thesis, "A three-process theory
of reading rate-Letters, words, and sentences". Now applying to medical
school. Sixth author on Visual Sciences Society poster, May 2005.
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(Left) Left
to right: Ameer Thompson, Emily Huang, Garga Chatterjee, and Brancusi's
Sleeping Muse I at the Guggenheim
Museum. (Right) Garga, Emily, and Ameer. 2004 |
Garga Chatterjee (summer 2004 SURP) “Visual identification
of designed symbols and signs - holistic or by parts?” Author on ECVP 2004
abstract published in Perception.
Graduated in Medicine and now interning in neurology at Medical College,
University of Calcutta, India. Now graduate student
with Ken Nakayama in Psychology at Harvard.
Emily Huang (summer 2004 SURP) “Visual object
resolution is preattentive.” Graduated from Princeton University
2005. Now medical student at UMDNJ Robert Wood Johnson Medical School
in New Jersey.
Ameer Thompson (summer 2004 SURP) “What makes
a good face? Isolating and recognizing faces.” Author on ECVP 2004
abstract published in Perception.
Graduated in 2005 from California State University, Sacramento. Now
a PhD student in the Molecular, Cellular and Integrative Physiology program
at UC Davis.
Jodi Gilman (summer 2003 SURP) Where are letters
learned? An fMRI study presented at NYU
.
Now graduate student in Neuroscience at Brown University.
Erica Ramos (summer 2003 SURP) Where are letters
learned? An fMRI study presented at NYU
.
Now graduate student in School Psychology PhD program at Fordham University.
Neisha D'Souza (summer 2002 SURP) Efficiency
for identifying filtered letters presented at ECVP 2002. Now helping
AIDS patients at Positive People Foundation in Goa, India.
Tracey Berger (20012002)
Honors thesis, Seeing
sound: Changing visual perception through cross-modal interaction,
Berger,
Martelli, & Pelli (2003) Flicker flutter: Is an
illusory event as good as the real thing? Journal
of Vision
.
Pelli, Tillman, Freeman, Su,
Berger, & Majaj (2007) Crowding and eccentricity
determine reading rate. Journal
of Vision. BA
Psychology and Sociology (dual major) NYU 2002. Juris Doctor at Northwestern
U Law School, 2006. Now Associate at the Bingham law firm in San Francisco.
EvaRose Dwyer (summer 2001 SURP) When independence
fails presented at ECVP 2001. Now working with Donald Pfaff on
neurobiology and behavior at Rockefeller University.
Rachel Insler (summer 2001 SURP) When independence
fails presented at ECVP 2001. Now graduate student in Cognitive
Neuroscience at Columbia University.
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Michael Su (20012004) Reading quickly
in the periphery presented at VSS .
Pelli, Tillman,
Freeman, Su, Berger, & Majaj (2007) Crowding and eccentricity
determine reading rate. Journal of Vision..
BA NYU 2004. Now medical student at NYU Medical School. |
Asmita Mishra (20012002) Development of
efficiency for identification with age presented at ECVP
.
Gunjan Baweja (2000ongoing) Development
of efficiency for identification with age presented at ECVP
.
Now medical student at St. George's University, Grenada.
Laurie Smith (summer 2000) The threshold for
beauty in art presented at ECVP 2002. Now graduate student in Clinical
Psychology at Columbia University.
Chris Christian (19992000) Grouping of
features in letter identification. Now medical student at Albert
Einstein College of Medicine.
Noah Raizman (summer 1999 SURP) Grouping of
features in letter identification. Now medical student at College
of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University.
Yulia Gutman (19992000) Identifying letters
and words. BA summa cum laude in Psychology with a minor
in Sociology NYU 2002. Phi Beta Kappa. Now graduate student in the Clinical
Psychology PhD Program at St. Johns University. She's externing at Kings
County Hospital in Brooklyn.
Taku Taira (19981999) Honor's thesis, The
fragile edges of block-averaged portraits.
BA
in Psychology NYU 1999. Now medical student at SUNY Stony Brook.
Melanie
Palomares (19981999) Honor's thesis. Published in Journal
of Vision
, Vision
Research
,
and Science (correspondence) [full
text]. After graduating, Neuroscience NYU 1999, Melanie stayed
on as our lab manager for two years. Received PhD in Psychology
at Johns Hopkins University 2006. Now postdoc with Tony Norcia at Smith
Kettlewell Institute for Visual Science.
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