Round Table Sponsored by META
Friday 16:00
Visual Search: Past, present & future.
Ioan Smart1, Árni Kristjánsson2,
Ian Thornton3
1Division
Of Psychology, School of Applied Sciences, Abertay University, UK,2Faculty of Psychology, University of Iceland, 3Department of Cognitive Science, Faculty of Media &
Knowledge Sciences, University of Malta, Msida, Malta
MDPI Keynote Talk
Friday
17:30
Sensory eye dominance and plasticity in adult binocular vision
Tim Ledgeway, University of Nottingham
Introduced by Professor Andrew Parker (Oxford
University & Otto-von-Guericke University in Magdeburg, Germany)
Session 1:
Saturday
09:30
Chair Jasna Martinovich, Edinburgh University.
The visual cortex in migraine with aura has more neural noise
Louise O'Hare1, Paul B. Hibbard2,
Arnold J. Wilkins2
1School of
Social Sciences, Nottingham Trent University, 2Department of
Psychology, University of Essex
Dynamic resource allocation in spatial working memory during full and partial report tasks
Siobhan M McAteer, Anthony McGregor, Daniel T Smith
Durham University, Department of Psychology
Challenging the Bouma law in visual crowding
Ramakrishna Chakravarthi, Amarachi Orisakwe, and
Nabeelah Young
School of Psychology, University of Aberdeen
An introduction to the "rocking line" illusion.
Ian M. Thornton1 & Dejan Todorović
2
1Department
of Cognitive Science, Faculty of Media & Knowledge Sciences, University of
Malta, Msida, Malta, 2Laboratory of Experimental Psychology,
Department of Psychology, University of Belgrade, Belgrade, Serbia
Temporal dynamics of serial dependence in face perception and visual working memory
Anette Lidström
Department of Psychology, Lund University, Sweden
Session 2:
Saturday
11:15
Chair Nika Adamian, Aberdeen University.
What exactly is so "super" about Super-recognisers?
Gillert, Isabel, M1,Rogers, Claire1, Davis,
Josh, P2, Rajendran, Gnanathusharan1, Delicato, Louise, S1
1Herriot-Watt
University, Edinburgh, 2 University of Greenwich
Excessive searching in visual search
Amelia R. Hunt, Anna Nowakowska, Stella Lin, Eden Reddy and Alasdair D.F. Clarke
School of Psychology, University of Aberdeen
Scarcity Effects (or lack of) in Visual Foraging
Heather Statham, Dr Anna Hughes, Dr Alasdair Clarke
University of Essex
Observers can adapt their search strategy on a trial-by-trial basis
Anna Nowakowska, Amelia Hunt
School of Psychology, University of Aberdeen
The influence of target identity on the efficiency of eye movements during visual search
Manjiri Bhat1, Anna Nowakowska1,
Amelia Hunt1, Alasdair Clarke2
1School of
Psychology, University of Aberdeen, 2University of Essex
Lunch Break and an opportunity to explore Dundee
Saturday 12:30
Session 3:
Saturday
15:15
Action Perception in Athletes is Underpinned by Cue Use
Róisín Harrison, Martin Giesel & Constanze Hesse
School of Psychology, University of Aberdeen
Applying Bayesian hierarchical modelling to assess the speed of goal side selection in a soccer related penalty shot task.
Geoffrey R. Patching
Department of Psychology, Lund University, Sweden
Effect of subjective visual awareness on multisensory integration: computational model analysis of manual reaction times
Sanni Ahonen1 , Thomas Otto2,
Arash Sahraie1
1University
of Aberdeen, 2University of St Andrews
Adaptive estimation of continuous object position
Justin Ales
School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of
St Andrews,
Virtual Reality for Vision Science: new stimuli and new ways of seeing
Paul Hibbard
Department of Psychology, University of Essex
Session 4:
Saturday
17:00
Chair Louise O'Hare, Nottingham Trent University.
How do bumblebees approach objects when they are iridescent?
Li Shiwen, Alexandra E. Reynard, Natalie Hempel de
Ibarra, Rebekah C. White, Hannah E. Smithson
Department of Experimental Psychology, University of
Oxford, Woodstock Road, OX2 6GG, Oxford, UK
A dynamical firing rate model of optic flow integration in the sky compass network in the brain of the desert locust
Kathrin Pabst1, Uwe Homberg2,
Dominik Endres1
1Department
of Psychology and 2Department of Biology, Philipps Universität Marburg, Germany
Feature-based attention during smooth pursuit
eye movements
Nika Adamian1, Benjamin W. Tatler1,
Søren K. Andersen1,2
1School of
Psychology, University of Aberdeen, UK 2Institute for Psychology,
University of Southern Denmark, Denmark.
Frontal Visual Response Fields Integrate Target and Landmark Cues for Gaze Control
J. Douglas Crawford1,2, Vishal Bharmauria1,2, Adrian Schütz2,3, and Frank Bremmer2,3
1Centre for Vision Research and Vision: Science to Applications Program, York University, 2Brain in Action International Research Training Program, 3Department of Neurophysics, and Center for Mind, Brain and Behavior, Philipps-Universität Marburg.
Binocular Portraits
Nicholas J. Wade
Psychology, University of Dundee, Dundee DD1 4HN, UK
Session 5:
Sunday
09:30
Chair Jordi Asher, Essex University.
The effects of naturalistic backgrounds and movements on judgements of motion
Hollie Carter, Julie Harris, Justin Ales
School of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of
St Andrews,
Some observations about binocular motion and depth processing
Martin Lages
School of
Psychology and Neuroscience, University of Glasgow
The stereoscopic anisotropy is present in frontoparallel cyclopean motion using suprathreshold disparities.
Ichasus Llamas-Cornejo1 & Ignacio Serrano-Pedraza1,2
1Department
of Experimental Psychology, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Madrid, 28223,
Spain 2Centre for Behaviour and Evolution, Newcastle University,
Newcastle upon Tyne, NE2 4HH, UK
Induced motion at short durations reveals a strong interaction between high and low spatial frequencies.
Omar Bachtoula1 & Ignacio Serrano-Pedraza1,2
1Department
of Experimental Psychology, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Madrid, 28223,
Spain 2Centre for Behaviour and Evolution, Newcastle University,
Newcastle upon Tyne, NE2 4HH, UK
Characterizing reversals in motion discrimination when high and low spatial frequencies are combined
Sandra Arranz-Paraíso1, & Ignacio Serrano-Pedraza1,2,
1Faculty
of Psychology. Complutense University of Madrid, Madrid, 28223, Spain, 2Institute
of Neuroscience, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE2 4HH, UK
Session 6:
Sunday
11:15
Summation and Differencing Channel Adaptation Affects Motion-in-Depth Speed Discrimination
Lauren Murray
Department of Psychology, Faculty of Natural Sciences
University of Stirling
Increasing parallactic change compresses depth and perceived distance
Xue Teng, Laurie M. Wilcox, and Robert S. Allison
Centre for Vision Research, York University, Toronto,
Canada
Measuring variability in EEG waveforms: Lessons from visual evoked potentials
Jasna Martinovic
School of Philosophy, Psychology and Language
Sciences, University of Edinburgh
Chromatic and spatial image statistics predict infants’ visual preferences
Philip McAdams1, Sara Svobodova1,
Kezia Terry1, Taysa-Ja Newman1, Megan Chambers1,
Jenny Bosten2, Alice Skelton1, Anna Franklin1
1The
Sussex Colour Group & Baby Lab, The School of Psychology, University of
Sussex, Brighton, BN1 9RH, UK 2Sussex Vision Lab, The School of
Psychology, University of Sussex, Brighton, BN1 9RH,
UK
Human cortical tuning for binocular disparity reveals discrete classes of neural activations.
Andrew J. Parker1,2 Ivan Alvarez3,4,
Alessandro Mancari5, I. Betina Ip3,4, Holly Bridge3,4
1 Department
of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics, University of Oxford, Oxford, United
Kingdom, 2 Department of Sensory Physiology, Institute of Biology,
Otto von Guericke University, Magdeburg, Germany, 3 Oxford Centre
for Functional MRI of the Brain (FM
Available
Saturday and Sunday
Can cognitive tests differentiate Progressive Supranuclear Palsy from Parkinson’s disease?
Alexis Cheviet, Alison Lane, Anthony Atkinson &
Daniel T. Smith
Durham University, Department of Psychology
Colour vision screening test sensitivity before and one week after cataract
Zane Jansone-Langina & Maris Ozolinsh
University of Latvia, dept. of Optometry and Vision
science, Riga, LV-1004, Latvia
Computerised colour vision test
Renārs Trukša, Zane Jansone-Langina, Sergejs
Fomins, Jānis Dzenis
Optometry and Vision Science Department, University of
Latvia, Riga, Latvia
Probabilistic attentional priming
Árni Kristjánsson
University of Iceland
The Effect of Stimulus Contrast and Direction on Saccadic Eye Movement Parameters
Viktorija Goliskina, Ilze Ceple, Renars Truksa,
Sergejs Fomins, Gatis Ikaunieks, Aiga Svede, Evita Serpa, Liva Volberga, Linda
Krauze, Evita Kassaliete, Sofija Vasiljeva, Gunta Krumina
Department of Optometry and Vision Science, Univesity
of Latvia
Presentation Details
Talks: Speakers should aim for 12 minutes of talking and 3 minutes of questions. There will be a room PC with powerpoint available connected to a projector and speakers. We will try to provide appropriate connections for laptops, but bring a USB stick just in case.
Posters can be A0 landscape or portrait.