Christopher Tyler

Likova, L. T., Tyler, C. W., Cacciamani, L., Mineff, K. N., & Nicholas, S. C. (2016). The Cortical Network for Braille Writing in the Blind. Electronic Imaging, 2016, 1–6. 10.2352/ISSN.2470-1173.2016.16.HVEI-095 PMID: 28890944 PMCID: PMC5589194 (Original work published Feb 14 2016)
Tyler, C. W., Likova, L. T., & Nicholas, S. C. (2016). In search of a melanopsin contribution to the ERG: Reconceptualizing the source of the a-wave? Vision Sciences Society, St. Pete Beach, Florida.
Likova, L. T., & Tyler, C. W. (2003). Spatiotemporal relationships in a dynamic scene: stereomotion induction and suppression. Journal Of Vision, 3. 10.1167/3.4.5
Likova, L. T., Tyler, C. W., Mineff, K. N., Cacciamani, L., & Nicholas, S. C. (2016). Fundamental anti-symmetries in the brain organization of conceptual knowledge representation help resolve long-standing controversies. Vision Sciences Society, St. Pete Beach, Florida.
Likova, L. T., Tyler, C. W., Mineff, K. N., Cacciamani, L., & Nicholas, S. C. (2016). High-order multisensory mechanisms: Insights from Braille writing and reading. Special Session on Multisensory Interactions. IS&T’2016.
Tyler, C. W., & Likova, L. T. (2007). Crowding: A neuro-analytic approach. Journal Of Vision, Http:// Journalofvision.org/7/2/16/ , 7(2)(16). 10.1167/7.2.16
Likova, L. T., & Tyler, C. W. (2004). Is the hMT+/V5 complex in the human brain involved in stereomotion perception? An fMRI study. Electronic Imaging 2004. 10.1117/12.568026 (Original work published 2004)
Likova, L. T., & Tyler, C. W. (2003). Peak localization of sparsely sampled luminance patterns is based on interpolated 3D surface representation. Vision Research, 43, 2649–2657. org/10.1016/S0042-6989(02)00575-8
Tyler, C. W., Howarth, C., & Likova, L. T. (2016). Editorial:“Neural signal estimation in the human brain”. Frontiers In Neuroscience, 10, 185. 10.3389/fnins.2016.00185 PMID: 27199647 PMCID: PMC4850329 (Original work published Apr 29 2016)
Tyler, C. W., Likova, L. T., & Nicholas, S. C. (2015). Analysis of Neural-BOLD Coupling Through Four Models of the Neural Metabolic Demand. Frontiers In Neuroscience, 9. 10.3389/fnins.2015.00419