Selected Publications
Time Course (ERP)
Schendan, H.E., & Lucia, L.C. (submitted). ERP View Atypicality Effects Reveal Common and Distinct Cortical Processes for Visual Object Categorization and Recognition after 200 ms.
Schendan, H.E., Ganis, G., & Leung, E.A. (submitted). Top-Down Processes of Model Verification Facilitate Category Decisions with Visually Impoverished Objects after 200 ms.
Schendan, H.E., & Lucia, L.C. (in press). Object-Sensitive Activity Reflects Earlier Perceptual and Later Cognitive Processing of Visual Objects between 95 and 500 ms. Brain Research. PDF of uncorrected proof
Voss, J.L., Schendan, H.E., & Paller, K.A. (2010). Finding meaning in novel geometric shapes influences electrophysiological correlates of repetition and dissociates perceptual and conceptual priming. NeuroImage, 49(3):2879-2889. PDF
Schendan, H.E., & Lucia, L.C. (2009). Visual Object Cognition Precedes but also Temporally Overlaps Mental Rotation. Brain Research, 1294:91-105. PDFSchendan, H.E., & Maher, S.M. (2009). Object Knowledge during Entry-Level Categorization Is Activated and Modified by Implicit Memory after 200 ms. NeuroImage, 44:1423-1438. PDF
Ganis, G., & Schendan, H.E. (2008). Visual Mental Imagery and Perception Produce Opposite Adaptation Effects on Early Brain Potentials. NeuroImage, 42:1714-1727. PDF
Schendan, H.E., & Kutas, M. (2007). Neurophysiological Evidence for the Time Course of Activation of Global Shape, Part, and Local Contour Representations during Visual Object Categorization and Memory. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 19(5):734-749. PDF
Schendan, H.E., & Kutas, M. (2007). Neurophysiological Evidence for Transfer Appropriate Processing of Memory: Processing versus Feature Similarity. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 14(4):612-619. PDF
Schendan, H.E., & Kutas, M., 2003. Time Course of Processes and Representations Supporting Visual Object Identification and Memory. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 15(1): 111-135. PDF
Schendan, H.E., & Kutas, M., 2002. Neurophysiological Evidence for Two Processing Times for Visual Object Identification. Neuropsychologia, 40(7): 931-945. PDF
Schendan, H.E., Ganis, G., & Kutas, M., 1998. Neurophysiological Evidence for Visual Perceptual Categorization of Words and Faces within 150 ms. Psychophysiology, 35(3):240-251. PDF
Schendan, H.E., Kanwisher, N.G., & Kutas, M., 1997. Early Brain Potentials Link Repetition Blindness, Priming and Novelty Detection. Neuroreport, 8(8):1943-1948. PDF
Functional Neuroanatomy (fMRI, Neuropsychology)
Schendan, H.E., Amick, M.M., & Cronin-Golomb, A. (2009). Role of a Lateralized Parietal-Basal Ganglia Circuit in Hierarchical Pattern Perception: Evidence from Parkinson’s Disease. Behavioral Neuroscience, 123(1):125-136. PDF
Schendan, H.E., & Stern, C.E. (2008). Where Vision Meets Memory: Prefrontal-Posterior Networks for Visual Object Constancy during Categorization and Recognition. Cerebral Cortex, 18(7):1695-1711. PDF
Tinaz, A.S., Schendan, H.E., & Stern C.E. (2008). Fronto-striatal deficit in Parkinson’s disease during semantic event sequencing. Neurobiology of Aging, 29(3):397-407. PDF
Schendan, H.E., & Stern, C.E. (2007). Mental Rotation and Object Categorization Share a Common Network of Prefrontal and Dorsal and Ventral Regions of Posterior Cortex. NeuroImage, 35(3):1264-1277. PDF
Ganis, G., Schendan, H.E., & Kosslyn, S.M. (2007). Neuroimaging Evidence for Object Model Verification Theory: Role of Prefrontal Control in Visual Object Categorization. NeuroImage, 34(1):384-398. PDF
Olesen, P.J., Schendan, H.E., Amick, M.M., & Cronin-Golomb, A. (2007). HIV Infection Affects Parietal-Dependent Spatial Cognition: Evidence from Mental Rotation and Hierarchical Pattern Perception. Behavioral Neuroscience, 121(6):1163-1173. PDF
Amick, M.M., Schendan, H.E., Ganis, G., & Cronin-Golomb, A. (2006). Frontostriatal Circuits Are Necessary for Visuomotor Transformation: Mental Rotation in Parkinson's Disease. Neuropsychologia, 44:339-349. PDF
Tinaz, A.S., Schendan, H.E., Schon, K., & Stern C.E. (2006). Evidence for the Importance of Basal Ganglia Output Nuclei in Semantic Event Sequencing: An fMRI Study. Brain Research, 1067(1):239-249. PDF
Schendan, H.E., Searl, M.M., Melrose, R.J., Stern, C.E. (2003). Sequence? What Sequence? – the human medial temporal lobe and sequence learning. Molecular Psychiatry, 8(11), 896-897. PDF
Schendan, H.E., Searl, M.M., Melrose, R.J., & Stern, C.E., 2003. An fMRI Study of the Role of the Medial Temporal Lobe in Implicit and Explicit Sequence Learning. Neuron, 37:1013-1025. PDF
download pdf of commentary for this article
Oscar Berman, M. & Schendan, H.E. (2000). Asymmetries of Brain Function in Alcoholism: Relationship to Aging. In Neurobehavior of Language and Cognition: Studies of Normal Aging and Brain Damage. Connor, L. T. & Obler, L. K. (Eds.). Kluwer Academic Pub. PDF
Theory and Neurocomputation
Ganis, G., & Schendan, H.E. (accepted). Visual imagery and memory. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Cognitive Science.
Schendan, H.E., & Stern, C.E. (2008). Where Vision Meets Memory: Prefrontal-Posterior Networks for Visual Object Constancy during Categorization and Recognition. Cerebral Cortex, 18(7):1695-1711. PDF (also listed under Functional Neuroanatomy)
Schendan, H.E., & Kutas, M. (2007). Neurophysiological Evidence for the Time Course of Activation of Global Shape, Part, and Local Contour Representations during Visual Object Categorization and Memory. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 19(5):734-749. PDF (also listed under Time Course)
Ganis, G., & Schendan, H.E. (1992). Hebbian Learning of Artificial Grammars. Peer-reviewed paper published in the Proceedings of the Fourteenth Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, pp. 838-843. PDF
Schendan, H.E. (1992). Attention, Memory, and Concepts in Autism. Peer-reviewed paper published in the Proceedings of the Fourteenth Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society, pp. 1110-1115. PDF
Treisman, A., & Schendan, H. (1990). Implicit and Explicit Memory for Novel Visual Patterns: Effects of Color, Size, Position, and Affective Association. Results published in: Treisman, A., 1992. “Perceiving and Re-Perceiving Objects.” 99th Annual Convention of the American Psychological Association: Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award address (1991, San Francisco, CA). American Psychologist, 47(7):862-875. PDF