BERTAMINI, MARCO
 Distribuzione geografica
Continente #
NA - Nord America 9.330
AS - Asia 1.759
EU - Europa 1.237
SA - Sud America 342
AF - Africa 58
OC - Oceania 13
Continente sconosciuto - Info sul continente non disponibili 1
Totale 12.740
Nazione #
US - Stati Uniti d'America 9.286
SG - Singapore 788
HK - Hong Kong 532
IT - Italia 416
BR - Brasile 312
CN - Cina 276
DE - Germania 130
PL - Polonia 124
RU - Federazione Russa 119
GB - Regno Unito 102
FI - Finlandia 96
SE - Svezia 62
NL - Olanda 45
FR - Francia 44
VN - Vietnam 43
AT - Austria 17
IE - Irlanda 17
TR - Turchia 15
UA - Ucraina 14
BD - Bangladesh 13
IN - India 12
CA - Canada 10
ZA - Sudafrica 10
EC - Ecuador 8
IQ - Iraq 8
MX - Messico 8
JP - Giappone 7
CO - Colombia 6
NZ - Nuova Zelanda 6
VE - Venezuela 6
AR - Argentina 5
AZ - Azerbaigian 5
JO - Giordania 5
NO - Norvegia 5
TT - Trinidad e Tobago 5
AE - Emirati Arabi Uniti 4
CZ - Repubblica Ceca 4
DZ - Algeria 4
HR - Croazia 4
HU - Ungheria 4
KR - Corea 4
LA - Repubblica Popolare Democratica del Laos 4
MA - Marocco 4
MR - Mauritania 4
PK - Pakistan 4
SA - Arabia Saudita 4
TN - Tunisia 4
BE - Belgio 3
BY - Bielorussia 3
CI - Costa d'Avorio 3
EE - Estonia 3
ES - Italia 3
ID - Indonesia 3
KH - Cambogia 3
KZ - Kazakistan 3
MW - Malawi 3
NP - Nepal 3
RO - Romania 3
UZ - Uzbekistan 3
AL - Albania 2
AO - Angola 2
AU - Australia 2
BA - Bosnia-Erzegovina 2
BB - Barbados 2
BS - Bahamas 2
CL - Cile 2
CR - Costa Rica 2
CU - Cuba 2
DM - Dominica 2
DO - Repubblica Dominicana 2
EG - Egitto 2
GN - Guinea 2
GR - Grecia 2
HT - Haiti 2
IL - Israele 2
JM - Giamaica 2
MD - Moldavia 2
ML - Mali 2
MY - Malesia 2
MZ - Mozambico 2
PE - Perù 2
PF - Polinesia Francese 2
PH - Filippine 2
RS - Serbia 2
SN - Senegal 2
SY - Repubblica araba siriana 2
TL - Timor Orientale 2
TW - Taiwan 2
UG - Uganda 2
ZM - Zambia 2
AD - Andorra 1
AF - Afghanistan, Repubblica islamica di 1
BG - Bulgaria 1
BW - Botswana 1
CG - Congo 1
CV - Capo Verde 1
DK - Danimarca 1
GA - Gabon 1
GD - Grenada 1
GM - Gambi 1
Totale 12.713
Città #
Fairfield 2.234
Woodbridge 923
Ashburn 904
Seattle 822
Cambridge 768
Houston 755
Wilmington 603
Hong Kong 531
Singapore 421
Santa Clara 370
Ann Arbor 284
Boardman 204
San Diego 185
Princeton 142
Medford 140
Padova 131
Bytom 123
Chandler 123
Des Moines 98
Beijing 74
Helsinki 63
Nanjing 57
Munich 51
Dong Ket 33
Roxbury 33
London 31
Rovigo 23
Nuremberg 22
Hebei 19
Lappeenranta 19
Dublin 16
Shenyang 15
São Paulo 15
Torreglia 15
Kilburn 13
Pescara 13
Amsterdam 12
Jacksonville 12
Milan 12
Rome 12
Turku 12
Istanbul 11
Belo Horizonte 10
Rio de Janeiro 10
Bari 9
Guarulhos 9
Las Vegas 9
Los Angeles 9
Nanchang 9
Jiaxing 8
Kharkiv 8
Maserà di Padova 8
Norwalk 8
Brendola 7
Haikou 7
Jinan 7
Vienna 7
Atlanta 6
Borås 6
Buchdorf 6
Campo Grande 6
Council Bluffs 6
Curitiba 6
Dhaka 6
Hangzhou 6
Prescot 6
Riese Pio X 6
Amman 5
Baku 5
Brasília 5
Changsha 5
Chicago 5
Frankfurt am Main 5
Guayaquil 5
Ho Chi Minh City 5
Maceió 5
New York 5
North Bergen 5
Ogden 5
Verona 5
Vicenza 5
Wellington 5
Baghdad 4
Campinas 4
Chiswick 4
Codognè 4
Guangzhou 4
Hounslow 4
Johannesburg 4
New Bedfont 4
Ribeirão Preto 4
Santa Monica 4
São Luís 4
Taizhou 4
Tianjin 4
Tokyo 4
Treviso 4
Vientiane 4
Abidjan 3
Boydton 3
Totale 10.674
Nome #
The neural basis of visual symmetry and its role in mid-and high-level visual processing 204
An Advantage for Smooth Compared With Angular Contours in the Speed of Processing Shape 152
Eye centring in selfies posted on Instagram 142
Perceptual alternations in stereokinesis 140
Symmetry perception for patterns defined by color and luminance 140
I Am There … but Not Quite: An Unfaithful Mirror That Reduces Feelings of Ownership and Agency 138
Visual cortex activation predicts visual preference: Evidence from Britain and Egypt 133
Symmetric patterns with different luminance polarity (anti-symmetry) generate an automatic response in extrastriate cortex 132
A cross-cultural comparison for preference for symmetry: Comparing British and Egyptians non-experts4 130
Do observers like curvature or do they dislike angularity? 130
Exploring the Extent in the Visual Field of the Honeycomb and Extinction Illusions 127
Curve appeal: Exploring individual differences in preference for curved versus angular objects 127
The effect of clustering on perceived quantity in humans (Homo sapiens) and in chicks (Gallus gallus) 124
Blindness to Curvature and Blindness to Illusory Curvature 123
Electrophysiological responses to symmetry presented in the left or in the right visual hemifield 122
Detection of symmetry and perceptual organization: The way a lock-and-key process works 122
Representation of symmetry in the extrastriate visual cortex from temporal integration of parts: An EEG/ERP study 122
On what people know about images on mirrors 121
Men Do not Have a Stronger Preference than Women for Self-resemblant Child Faces 117
An electrophysiological index of perceptual goodness 112
Integration of ordinal and metric cues in depth processing 106
Amodal Completion of Partly Occluded Surfaces: Is There a Mosaic Stage? 106
The venus effect: People's understanding of mirror reflections in paintings 106
Edge-Orientation Entropy Predicts Preference for Diverse Types of Man-Made Images 106
Sustained response to symmetry in extrastriate areas after stimulus offset: An EEG study 105
Naive optics: acting on mirror reflections 105
No within-object advantage for detection of rotation 105
The tendency to overestimate what is visible in a planar mirror amongst adults and children 104
Mario Ponzo (1928) on perception of numerosity: A translation and commentary 103
Attentional interference is modulated by salience not sentience 103
Amodal completion and visual holes (static and moving) 103
The effects of presentation time on preference for curvature of real objects and meaningless novel patterns 103
Boundary extension: The role of magnification, object size, context, and binocular information 101
Rapid figure - Ground responses to stereograms reveal an advantage for a convex foreground 101
The chromatic input to global motion perception 100
Estimation and representation of head size (people overestimate the size of their head - Evidence starting from the 15th century) 99
Who owns the contour of a visual hole? 98
Understanding projectile acceleration 98
Comparing angular and curved shapes in terms of implicit associations and approach/avoidance responses 97
Opposition and identicalness: Two basic components of adults' perception and mental representation of symmetry 97
The integration of local chromatic motion signals is sensitive to contrast polarity 96
Anisotropy and polarization of space: Evidence from naïve optics and phenomenological psychophysics 96
Examining visual complexity and its influence on perceived duration 95
Through the looking glass: How the relationship between an object and its reflection affects the perception of distance and size 95
The Bathtub Illusion 95
Bite-size science and its undesired side effects 94
Hierarchical motion organization in random dot configurations 93
Symmetry preference in shapes, faces, flowers and landscapes 93
The perceived structural shape of thin (wire-like) objects is different from that of silhouettes 92
Right-lateralized alpha desynchronization during regularity discrimination: Hemispheric specialization or directed spatial attention? 92
Detection of change in shape and its relation to part structure 91
Scaling of the extrastriate neural response to symmetry 91
Testing Whether and When Abstract Symmetric Patterns Produce Affective Responses 91
Visual search for a circular region perceived as a figure versus as a hole: Evidence of the importance of part structure 91
Detection of change in shape and its relation to part structure 91
The vista paradox: Framing or contrast? 89
Electrophysiological analysis of the affective congruence between pattern regularity and word valence 89
Symmetry perception and affective responses: A combined EEG/EMG study 89
A Study of Objects With Smooth or Sharp Features Created as Line Drawings by Individuals Trained in Design 89
Clustering leads to underestimation of numerosity, but crowding is not the cause 89
Individual differences in the Muller-Lyer and Ponzo illusions are stable across different contexts 89
null 88
The shape of a hole and that of the surface-with-hole cannot be analyzed separately 88
Naïve predictions of motion and orientation in mirrors: From what we see to what we expect reflections to do 88
The Venus effect in real life and in photographs 87
Does left - right orientation matter in the perceived expressiveness of pictures? a study of Bewick's animals (1753-1828) 87
Seeing a Work of Art Indirectly: When a Reproduction Is Better Than an Indirect View, and a Mirror Better Than a Live Monitor 87
Measurement invariance of the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) and Generalized Anxiety Disorder scale (GAD-7) across four European countries during the COVID-19 pandemic 87
Implicit association of symmetry with positive valence, high arousal and simplicity 86
Illusory surfaces affect the integration of local motion signals 86
Attractiveness is influenced by the relationship between postures of the viewer and the viewed person 85
When S-cones contribute to chromatic global motion processing 85
Do different types of dynamic extrapolation rely on the same mechanism? 85
A visual-haptic Necker cube reveals temporal constraints on intersensory merging during perceptual exploration 84
Identifying contours from occlusion events 84
Self-Portraits: Smartphones Reveal a Side Bias in Non-Artists 83
Auditory clicks distort perceived velocity but only when the system has to rely on extraretinal signals 83
The pleasantness of visual symmetry: Always, never or sometimes 83
Understanding projectile acceleration 83
Relative size perception at a distance is best at eye level 83
Reasoning About Visibility in Mirrors: A Comparison Between a Human Observer and a Camera 83
Conditions for view invariance in the neural response to visual symmetry 83
The rubber hand illusion in a mirror 82
Errors in judging information about reflections in mirrors 82
The anterior bias in visual art: The case of images of animals 82
The honeycomb illusion: Uniform textures not perceived as such 82
The visual system prioritizes locations near corners of surfaces (not just locations near a corner) 81
Visual symmetry in objects and gaps 80
Implicit affective evaluation of visual symmetry 80
Early computation of contour curvature and part structure: Evidence from holes 79
Aesthetic Judgements of Abstract Dynamic Configurations 79
Detection of convexity and concavity in context 78
A gaze-driven evolutionary algorithm to study aesthetic evaluation of visual symmetry 78
Contour symmetry detection: the influence of axis orientation and number of objects 77
Foveal feedback and the discrimination of peripheral objects: timing and role 77
Sensitivity to reflection and translation is modulated by objectness 76
The Role of Perspective Taking on Attention: A Review of the Special Issue on the Reflexive Attentional Shift Phenomenon 76
Aesthetic preference for polygon shape 75
Symmetry Lasts Longer Than Random, but Only for Brief Presentations 74
False beliefs and naive beliefs: They can be good for you 73
Totale 9.833
Categoria #
all - tutte 50.441
article - articoli 49.029
book - libri 0
conference - conferenze 0
curatela - curatele 0
other - altro 0
patent - brevetti 0
selected - selezionate 0
volume - volumi 231
Totale 99.701


Totale Lug Ago Sett Ott Nov Dic Gen Feb Mar Apr Mag Giu
2020/20211.841 142 265 234 86 85 46 18 140 304 189 226 106
2021/20222.106 51 254 327 181 59 44 130 243 116 105 244 352
2022/2023620 240 1 4 58 98 68 17 35 58 2 30 9
2023/2024536 11 40 60 36 41 11 58 14 36 32 109 88
2024/20253.277 13 168 87 64 557 105 174 193 267 180 659 810
2025/202684 84 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Totale 13.063