Psychologists know that our brains constantly make decisions about what to look at. Neuroscientists like to study how the human brain juggles the information. New information has recently emerged.
Bitte melden Sie sich an um selbst Rezensionen oder Kommentare zu erstellen.
Zitieren Sie diese Publikation
Mehr Zitationsstile
- bitte auswählen -
%0 Journal Article
%1 palca2005researchers
%A Palca, Joe
%D 2005
%I National Public Radio
%J Weekend Edition Saturday
%K 2zotero health neuroscience radio vision
%T Researchers Take a Closer Look at Vision
%U http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4680386
%X Psychologists know that our brains constantly make decisions about what to look at. Neuroscientists like to study how the human brain juggles the information. New information has recently emerged.
@article{palca2005researchers,
abstract = {Psychologists know that our brains constantly make decisions about what to look at. Neuroscientists like to study how the human brain juggles the information. New information has recently emerged.},
added-at = {2012-07-01T21:49:40.000+0200},
author = {Palca, Joe},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2380ea3b3b69e68bc9c8851dc8eedfe9a/shelley.adams},
day = 04,
howpublished = {radio, web},
interhash = {04a226bac6f941b47f4d8e9b3b27e39f},
intrahash = {380ea3b3b69e68bc9c8851dc8eedfe9a},
journal = {Weekend Edition Saturday},
keywords = {2zotero health neuroscience radio vision},
month = jun,
publisher = {National Public Radio},
timestamp = {2016-10-23T13:36:10.000+0200},
title = {Researchers Take a Closer Look at Vision},
url = {http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4680386},
year = 2005
}