Michael Ezeana Data-verified
Affiliation confirmed via AI analysis of OpenAlex, ORCID, and web sources.
Researcher
grad_student
Research Areas
Biography and Research Information
OverviewAI-generated summary
Michael Ezeana, a graduate student at the University of Central Arkansas, investigates tactile and sensory interactions, with a particular focus on multisensory perception and integration. His research bridges the fields of hearing loss and rehabilitation with visual perception and processing mechanisms. Ezeana's work explores how humans integrate information from different senses to perceive the world. His research includes quantifying the crossmodal transfer of three-dimensional shape information between echolocation, vision, and haptics. He also studies spatial resolution across sensory modalities, contrasting echoic and visual object perception.
Metrics
- h-index: 1
- Publications: 2
- Citations: 2
Selected Publications
-
Object recognition via echoes: quantifying the crossmodal transfer of three-dimensional shape information between echolocation, vision, and haptics (2024)
-
How blurry are echoes? Quantifying the spatial resolution of echoic vs. visual object perception (2021)
Collaboration Network
Top Collaborators
- Object recognition via echoes: quantifying the crossmodal transfer of three-dimensional shape information between echolocation, vision, and haptics
- How blurry are echoes? Quantifying the spatial resolution of echoic vs. visual object perception
- Object recognition via echoes: quantifying the crossmodal transfer of three-dimensional shape information between echolocation, vision, and haptics
- How blurry are echoes? Quantifying the spatial resolution of echoic vs. visual object perception
- Object recognition via echoes: quantifying the crossmodal transfer of three-dimensional shape information between echolocation, vision, and haptics
- How blurry are echoes? Quantifying the spatial resolution of echoic vs. visual object perception
- Object recognition via echoes: quantifying the crossmodal transfer of three-dimensional shape information between echolocation, vision, and haptics