Vladislav Khvostov
khvo100v.bsky.social
Vladislav Khvostov
@khvo100v.bsky.social
Cognitive scientist. I study human visual perception, attention, and memory. Postdoc at the Vision and Cognitive Neuroscience lab (Golomb lab) @Ohio State University
This is so cool! Great job!
October 28, 2025 at 2:50 PM
Is there a link (or instructions) to download the plugin? I could find only this one: www.piwheels.org/project/psyc...
Is that it?
August 28, 2025 at 1:50 PM
I am surprised to see how openly you (and people in comments) dismiss the entire research subfield. But as an ensemble perception researcher, I can say that it would be useful for us to hear any constructive feedback
August 21, 2025 at 5:24 PM
This result necessitates a fundamental rethinking of how ensembles are processed. We argue that such distribution representations (NOT Summary statistics) are the most natural way for the visual system to represent groups of objects.
Read the full story here: link.springer.com/article/10.3... 5/5
Explicit access to detailed representations of feature distributions - Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
The human visual system can quickly process groups of objects (ensembles) and build compressed representations of their features. What does the conscious perception of ensembles consist of? Observersʼ...
link.springer.com
June 12, 2025 at 3:25 PM
The distributions of responses, both aggregated and separate for each observer, followed the shape of the presented distribution. Thus, after only brief exposure to a color set, the visual system builds detailed representations of feature distributions that observers have explicit access to. 4/5
June 12, 2025 at 3:25 PM
In our new paradigm (Feature Frequency Report), observers viewed 36 disks of various colors for 800 ms and then reported the frequency of a randomly chosen color using a slider. The sets had Gaussian, uniform, or bimodal color distributions with a random mean color. 3/5
June 12, 2025 at 3:25 PM
In our new paper, @arnig.bsky.social, Árni Kristjánsson, and I show that explicit ensemble representations are so much more than just Summary statistics — they contain information about the whole feature distribution! 2/5
June 12, 2025 at 3:25 PM