Publications 2015

Publications 2015

Eimer, M. (2015). EPS Mid-Career Award 2014: The control of attention in visual search – Cognitive and neural mechanisms. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 68, 2437-2463.

Eimer, M., & Grubert, A. (2015). A dissociation between selective attention and conscious awareness in the representation of temporal order information. Consciousness and Cognition, 35, 274-281.

Grubert, A., & Eimer, M. (2015). Does visual working memory represent the predicted locations of future target objects? An event-related brain potential study. Brain Research, 1626, 258-266.

Grubert, A., & Eimer, M. (2015). Rapid parallel attentional target selection in single-color and multiple-color visual search. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 41, 86-101.

Huber-Huber, C., Grubert, A., Ansorge, U., & Eimer, M. (2015). Naso-temporal ERP differences: Evidence for increased inhibition of temporal distractors. Journal of Neurophysiology, 113, 2210-2219.

Katus, T., & Eimer, M. (2015). Lateralized delay period activity marks the focus of spatial attention in working memory: Evidence from somatosensory event-related brain potentials. Journal of Neuroscience, 35, 6689-6695.

Katus, T., Grubert, A., & Eimer, M. (2015). Electrophysiological evidence for a sensory recruitment model of somatosensory working memory. Cerebral Cortex, 25, 4697–4703, doi:10.1093/cercor/bhu153.

Katus, T., Müller, M.M., & Eimer, M. (2015). Sustained maintenance of somatotopic information in brain regions recruited by tactile working memory. Journal of Neuroscience, 35, 1390-1395.

Lagroix, H.E.P., Grubert, A., Spalek. D.M., Di Lollo, V., & Eimer, M. (2015). Visual search is postponed during the period of the AB: an event-related potential study. Psychophysiology, 52, 1031-1038.

Nako, R., Smith, T.J., & Eimer, M. (2015). Activation of new attentional templates for real-world objects in visual search. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 27, 902-912.

Parketny, J., Towler, J., & Eimer, M (2015). The activation of visual face memory and explicit face recognition are delayed in developmental prosopagnosia. Neuropsychologia, 75, 538-547.

Towler, J., & Eimer, M. (2015). Early stages of perceptual face processing are confined to the contralateral hemisphere: Evidence from the N170 component. Cortex, 64, 89-101.

Wirth, B., Fisher, K., Towler, J., & Eimer, M. (2015). Facial misidentifications arise from the erroneous activation of visual face memory. Neuropsychologia, 77, 387-399.