Publication

Conferences

** Yiltiz, H., & Chen, L. (2018). Emotional cues and social anxiety resolve ambiguous perception of biological motion. Experimental Brain Research. 236. doi:10.1007/s00221-018-5233-3. ** Yiltiz, H., Heeger, D. & Landy, M. (2018). Contingent adaptation in masking and surround suppression. Journal of Vision, 18, 259. doi:10.1167/18.10.259. ** Pelli, D., & Yiltiz, H. (2017). What internal noise source limits peripheral vision? Journal of Vision, 17(10), 775. doi:10.1167/17.10.775 ** Yiltiz, H., & Pelli, D. G. (2017) Noise masking and crowding reveal two very different kinds of spatial integration. Journal of Vision, 17(10):802. doi:10.7490/f1000research.1115201.1 ** Yiltiz, H., Wu, X., & Pelli, D. (2016). Crowding area sets a lower bound on the neural noise that limits letter identification. Journal of Vision, 16(12), 173. doi:10.1167/16.12.173 ** Pelli, D., … Yiltiz, H. (2016). A clinical test for visual crowding. F1000Research 5:81. doi:10.12688/f1000research.7835.1 ** Yiltiz, H., & Chen, L. (2015). Tactile input and empathy modulate the perception of ambiguous biological motion. Frontiers in Psychology, 6:161. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00161 ** Yiltiz, H., & Chen L. (2013). Tactile inputs resolve the ambiguous perception of biological point light walkers. doi:10.1167/13.9.190. ** Yiltiz, H. & Chen, L. (2013). Tactile temporal groupings bias perception of ambiguous point light walkers. The 9th Asia-Pacific Conference on Vision. China, Jiangsu, Suzhou. doi: 10.1002/pchj.32

Literature (translation to Uyghur)

** Yiltiz, H. (2013). The Old Man and The Sea. National Literature, vol.4-5. ** Yiltiz, H. (2008). On Success. China’s Ethnic Groups, vol.120, 5-01. ** Yiltiz, H. (2009). Good Mistakes. China’s Ethnic Groups, vol.122, 1-01. ** Yiltiz, H. (2010). The Power of Words. China’s Ethnic Groups, vol.131, 4-01. ** Yiltiz, H. (2010). You Reap What You Sow. China’s Ethnic Groups, vol.133, 6-01. ** Yiltiz, H. (2011). You Are Beautiful. China’s Ethnic Groups, vol.139, 6-26. ** Yiltiz, H. (2012). The Cobbler and The Banker. China’s Ethnic Groups, vol.140, 1-65.