Karen Gunther
- Program Chair for Neuroscience Minor
- Professor of Psychology
- Baxter Hall 322
- 765-361-6286
- guntherk@wabash.edu
- Curriculum vitae
A near-native of California, but one who keeps returning to the Midwest, Professor Gunther has taught at Wabash College since 2007. Her primary research focuses on color vision – although we have known for over 200 years that color vision begins with three different cone types in the retina, we still don’t know exactly how the retina and brain process the neural signals from the cones. The type of research she conducts, called psychophysics, is at the intersection of psychology, biology, and neuroscience - human behavioral responses to visual stimuli are used to elucidate the underlying neural mechanisms. She has taken students to conferences to present their research, both regional undergraduate conferences and national professional conferences.
Another line of research is a Study of Teaching and Learning, examining the use of non-fiction novels as the textbooks for teaching Sensation & Perception, to give the students more of a story line on which to hang the facts presented in class lectures.
In her free time, Professor Gunther quilts, cooks, reads, and plays with her cat Sushi.
Education
Post-Doctoral Fellowship, Medical College of Wisconsin,
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 2002-2006
Topic: molecular genetics of color vision
PhD, Cognitive Science Interdisciplinary Program
primary field: Psychology
secondary field: Neuroscience
UC San Diego, 2002
Dissertation topic: color vision
MA, Psychology
UC San Diego, 1996
Thesis topic: music perception
BA, Biopsychology
Oberlin College
Oberlin, OH, 1992
Recent Course Offerings
Specialty courses:
PSY232 – Sensation & Perception & PSY/NSC332 – Research in
Sensation & Perception
PSY235 – Cognitive Neuropsychology
PSY/NSC310 – Sensory Transduction
PSY/NSC204 – Principles of Neuroscience
PSY107 – Health Psychology
Psychology core courses:
PSY101 – Introductory Psychology
PSY201/202 – Research Methods and Statistics
PSY301 – Literature Review
PSY495/496 – Senior Capstone Research Experience
All-college courses:
Freshman Tutorials (Interdisciplinary Color and Science and
Pseudoscience)
Enduring Questions
Research
Grant from the National Science Foundation, Division of Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences (2018-2023), RUI: Stimulus Characteristics Influencing Non-Cardinal Color Mechanisms
Recent Presentations
Can failed Hebbian wiring explain the difficulty in finding separate non-cardinal mechanisms in the S vs L+M color plane?
- International Colour Vision Society, Heraklion, Greece, July 2022
- Vision Sciences Society, St. Pete Beach, FL, May 2022
Cortically-stimulating gratings reveal non-cardinal colors better than do LGN-stimulating spots
- International Colour Vision Society, Riga, Latvia, July 2019
- Optical Society of America Fall Vision Meeting, Univ. of Nevada,
Reno, Sept. 2018
- work with Jorge Rodriguez W'18, Colby Dunigan W'18 & Carson
Powell W'16
Non-cardinal color mechanisms: Stimulus size matters.
- International Colour Vision Society, Sendai, Japan, July 2015
- work with Colin Downey W'15
Recent Publications
Tompkins, N., & Gunther, K.L. (2022). Color vision deficiency and teaching electromagnetism. The Physics Teacher, 60, 466-468.
Gunther, K.L. (2022). Non-cardinal color mechanism elicitation by stimulus shape: Bringing the S versus L+M color plane to the table. Journal of Vision, 22(5), Article 5, 1-15. (open access: https://jov.arvojournals.org/article.aspx?articleid=2778744)
Gunther, K.L. & McKinney, M.R. (W'17) (2020). Poor peripheral binding depends in part on stimulus color. Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 82(7), 3606-3617.
Watson, Q.J. (W'16) & Gunther, K.L. (2017). Trombones elicit bitter more strongly than do clarinets: A partial replication of three studies of Crisinel and Spence. Multisensory Research, 30, 321-335.
Gunther, K.L. & Downey, C.O. (W'15) (2016). Influence of stimulus size on revealing non-cardinal color mechanisms. Vision Research, 127, 57-66.
Dalhaus, R.N., III (W’11) & Gunther, K.L. (2012). A tritan Waldo would be easier to detect in the periphery than a red/green one: Evidence from visual search. The Journal of Optical Society of America A, 29(2), A298-A305.
Gunther, K.L. (2011). The use of “non-fiction novels” in a sensation and perception course. The Journal of Undergraduate Neuroscience Education,10(1), A14-A23.