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Rufin Vogels

Rufin Vogels

D-Index & Metrics

Neuroscience

D-Index
67
Citations
13559
World Ranking
2919
National Ranking
27

Research.com Recognitions

  • 2013 - Member of Academia Europaea

Overview

Rufin Vogels is affiliated with KU Leuven in Belgium, focusing their research primarily within the field of neuroscience. Their work covers several subfields, including cognitive neuroscience, computer vision and pattern recognition, social psychology, cellular and molecular neuroscience, and experimental and cognitive psychology.

The scientist has contributed to a range of main and specialized research topics, such as face recognition and perception, neural dynamics and brain function, visual perception and processing mechanisms, neural and behavioral psychology studies, functional brain connectivity studies, visual attention and saliency detection, and action observation and synchronization.

Among their recent publications are:

  • More Than the Face: Representations of Bodies in the Inferior Temporal Cortex (2022), Annual Review of Vision Science
  • Evaluating the evidence for expectation suppression in the visual system (2021), Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews
  • An Open Resource for Non-human Primate Optogenetics (2020), Neuron
  • Statistical Learning Signals for Complex Visual Images in Macaque Early Visual Cortex (2020), Frontiers in Neuroscience
  • Stimulus expectations do not modulate visual event-related potentials in probabilistic cueing designs (2023), NeuroImage

Rufin Vogels frequently publishes in a number of scientific venues, including:

  • Journal of Vision
  • bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
  • NeuroImage
  • SSRN Electronic Journal
  • Cell Reports

Their research collaborations involve several co-authors with whom they have published multiple papers, notably Martin A. Giese, Rajani Raman, Anna Bognár, Nick Taubert, and Wim Vanduffel.

In recognition of contributions to the scientific community, they became a Member of Academia Europaea in 2013.

Best Publications

  • Practising orientation identification improves orientation coding in V1 neurons

    Aniek Schoups;Rufin Vogels;Ning Qian;Guy Orban

  • Human perceptual learning in identifying the oblique orientation: retinotopy, orientation specificity and monocularity.

    A A Schoups;Rufin Vogels;Guy Orban

  • Cue-invariant shape selectivity of macaque inferior temporal neurons

    Gyula Sáry;Rufin Vogels;Guy A. Orban

  • Selectivity of Neuronal Adaptation Does Not Match Response Selectivity: A Single-Cell Study of the fMRI Adaptation Paradigm

    Hiromasa Sawamura;Guy A. Orban;Rufin Vogels

  • Inferotemporal neurons represent low-dimensional configurations of parameterized shapes.

    Hans Op de Beeck;Johan Wagemans;Rufin Vogels

  • Spatial sensitivity of macaque inferior temporal neurons

    Hans Op De Beeck;Rufin Vogels

  • The response variability of striate cortical neurons in the behaving monkey.

    Rufin Vogels;Werner Spileers;Guy Orban

  • Cortical correlate of pattern backward masking

    G Kovács;Rufin Vogels;Guy Orban

  • The effect of practice on the oblique effect in line orientation judgments.

    Rufin Vogels;Guy A. Orban

  • Selectivity for 3D Shape That Reveals Distinct Areas Within Macaque Inferior Temporal Cortex

    Peter Janssen;Rufin Vogels;Guy A. Orban

  • Human orientation discrimination tested with long stimuli

    Guy A. Orban;Erik Vandenbussche;Rufin Vogels

  • Macaque inferior temporal neurons are selective for disparity-defined three-dimensional shapes.

    Peter Janssen;Rufin Vogels;Guy A. Orban

  • Learning to See the Difference Specifically Alters the Most Informative V4 Neurons

    Steven Raiguel;Rufin Vogels;Santosh G Mysore;Guy A Orban

  • Three-dimensional shape coding in inferior temporal cortex

    Peter Janssen;Rufin Vogels;Guy A Orban

  • Categorization of complex visual images by rhesus monkeys. Part 2: single-cell study.

    Rufin Vogels

  • How well do response changes of striate neurons signal differences in orientation: a study in the discriminating monkey

    Rufin Vogels;Guy Orban

  • At Least at the Level of Inferior Temporal Cortex, the Stereo Correspondence Problem Is Solved

    Peter Janssen;Peter Janssen;Rufin Vogels;Yan Liu;Guy A Orban

  • Using Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging to Assess Adaptation and Size Invariance of Shape Processing by Humans and Monkeys

    Hiromasa Sawamura;Svetlana Georgieva;Rufin Vogels;Wim Vanduffel

  • Activity of inferior temporal neurons during orientation discrimination with successively presented gratings

    Rufin Vogels;Guy Orban

  • Selectivity of macaque inferior temporal neurons for partially occluded shapes

    G Kovács;Rufin Vogels;Guy Orban

Frequent Co-Authors

Guy A. Orban
Guy A. Orban University of Parma
Wim Vanduffel
Wim Vanduffel Harvard University
Hans Op de Beeck
Hans Op de Beeck Allen Institute for Brain Science
Irving Biederman
Irving Biederman University of Southern California
Gyula Kovács
Gyula Kovács Friedrich Schiller University Jena
Bruno Rossion
Bruno Rossion University of Lorraine
Martin A. Giese
Martin A. Giese University of Tübingen
Gaute T. Einevoll
Gaute T. Einevoll Norwegian University of Life Sciences

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