Ian Stevenson
Associate Professor/Psychological Sciences
Storrs Mansfield
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Scholarly Contributions
80 Scholarly Contributions
Estimating short-term synaptic plasticity from paired spike recordings
2015
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Spatially distributed local fields in the hippocampus encode rat position
2014
Research Type: Journal Article
Novel acoustic stimuli can alter locomotor speed to hippocampal theta relationship
2014
Research Type: Journal Article
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/hipo.22308
Saliency and Saccade Encoding in the Frontal Eye Field During Natural Scene Search.
2014
Research Type: Journal Article
Injection of fully-defined signal mixtures: a novel high-throughput tool to study neuronal encoding and computations
2014
Research Type: Journal Article
Injection of fully-dened signal mixtures: A novel high-throughput paradigm to study neuronal encoding and computations
2014
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Novel acoustic stimuli can alter locomotor speed-theta relationship across the septotemporal axis of the hippocampus. Society for Neuroscience Abstracts
2014
Research Type: Poster/Presentation
Motion games improve balance control in stroke survivors: A preliminary study based on the principle of constraint-induced movement therapy
2013
Research Type: Journal Article
Generalization of unconstrained reaching with hand-weight changes.
2013
Research Type: Journal Article
Functional connectivity and tuning curves in populations of simultaneously recorded neurons.
2012
Research Type: Journal Article
Statistical assessment of the stability of neural movement representations.
2011
Research Type: Journal Article
Sensory adaptation and short term plasticity as Bayesian correction for a changing brain.
2010
Research Type: Journal Article
On the similarity of functional connectivity between neurons estimated across timescales.
2010
Research Type: Journal Article
The uncertainty associated with visual flow fields and their influence on postural sway: Weber's law suffices to explain the nonlinearity of vection.
2010
Research Type: Journal Article