Center for Perceptual Systems


  • Looking to a Bright Future

    The focus on brain health in this issue of Life & Letters is particularly compelling because our researchers are on the cusp of making dramatic breakthroughs in mental health research, cognitive neuroscience and in other areas that affect the lives of so many. What excites me about this research is its “translational” quality — our…

    Looking to a Bright Future

  • Breakthroughs in Brain Health: We’re Closer Than You Think

    It might not seem like it when you’ve forgotten your email password for the third time in as many days, but your brain is capable of amazing things. It can instantly process the intricate sensory inputs needed to understand the world while simultaneously conducting motor neurons to navigate these landscapes. It can read complex emotions…

    Breakthroughs in Brain Health: We’re Closer Than You Think

  • Watch Your Step

    Walking on natural terrain takes precise coordination between vision and body movements to efficiently and stably traverse any given path. But until now, vision and locomotion have been studied separately within controlled lab environments.  To better understand how gaze and gait work together to help us navigate the natural world, UT Austin researchers combined new…

    Watch Your Step

  • Picture Perfect

    Breakthrough research in image enhancement technology leads to free online tool What began as an effort to better understand how animal and human visual systems work has led to a revolutionary method for enlarging and enhancing photos that is being made available, free of charge, from the Center for Perceptual Systems. Wilson Geisler, center director…

    Picture Perfect

  • Research Briefs: Spring 2012

    College of Liberal Arts: Not Even Past Brings History to the Public The Web has many sites devoted to history, but only one brings together such a diverse group of historians with expertise in every major field and time period. For the past year, Not Even Past has drawn on the expertise of faculty and…

    Research Briefs: Spring 2012