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  1. Individual differences in change blindness.Katharina Verena Bergmann - unknown
    The present work shows the existence of systematic individual differences in change blindness. It can be concluded that the sensitivity for changes is a trait. That is, persons differ in their ability to detect changes, independent from the situation or the measurement method. Moreover, there are two explanations for individual differences in change blindness: a) capacity differences in visual selective attention that may be influenced by top-down activated attention helping to focus attention onto relevant stimuli b) differences in working memory (...)
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  • Sustained posterior contralateral activity indicates re-entrant target processing in visual change detection: an EEG study.Daniel Schneider, Sven Hoffmann & Edmund Wascher - 2014 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
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  • On the effects of multimodal information integration in multitasking.Stock Ann-Kathrin, Gohil Krutika, J. Huster René & Beste Christian - unknown
    There have recently been considerable advances in our understanding of the neuronal mechanisms underlying multitasking, but the role of multimodal integration for this faculty has remained rather unclear. We examined this issue by comparing different modality combinations in a multitasking paradigm. In-depth neurophysiological analyses of event-related potentials were conducted to complement the obtained behavioral data. Specifically, we applied signal decomposition using second order blind identification to the multi-subject ERP data and source localization. We found that both general multimodal information integration (...)
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