Takeo Watanabe Source Confirmed
Affiliation confirmed via AI analysis of OpenAlex, ORCID, and web sources.
Researcher
John Brown University
faculty
Research Areas
Links
Is this your profile? Verify and claim your profile
Biography and Research Information
OverviewAI-generated summary
Takeo Watanabe's work encompasses visual perception, neural dynamics, and sleep research at John Brown University. His interests span EEG and brain-computer interfaces, as well as face recognition. Watanabe's research also touches on advancements in photolithography techniques.
Metrics
- h-index: 49
- Publications: 316
- Citations: 8,753
Selected Publications
- A neural network model of how category learning alters perceptual similarity (2024) DOI
- Differential unconscious control of the medial prefrontal cortex during non-REM and REM sleep to mitigate anterograde and retrograde interferences in visual perceptual learning (2024) DOI
- 0365 Failure to Reduce Glutamate Levels in Medial Prefrontal Cortex During NREM Sleep Could Cause Transient Insomnia (2024) DOI
- A neural network model of category-learning induced transfer of visual perceptual learning (2023) DOI
- The medial prefrontal cortex and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex play complementary roles in facilitating visual perceptual learning during sleep (2023) DOI
- Masking that disrupts late phases of visual processing eliminates location specificity of visual perceptual learning (2023) DOI
- Visual perceptual learning of natural and Portilla & Simoncelli images occurs in a significantly different manner than visual perceptual learning of unnatural images (2023) DOI
- Substantial changes in global brain processing related to face perception in body dysmorphic disorder patients by training on low spatial frequency components in faces (2021) DOI
- Modeling visual perceptual learning of Contrast Discrimination with Integrated Reweighting (2021) DOI
- Mechanisms that stabilize visual perceptual learning differ in children and adults: Evidence from psychophysics and magnetic resonance spectroscopy (2021) DOI
- Task-irrelevant perceptual learning of moving natural stimuli induces a bias away from the exposed movement direction (2021) DOI
Collaborators
Researchers in the database who share publications
Similar Researchers
Based on overlapping research topics