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Adam C. Snyder

Researcher at Carnegie Mellon University

Publications -  36
Citations -  2362

Adam C. Snyder is an academic researcher from Carnegie Mellon University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Sensory system. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 33 publications receiving 1942 citations. Previous affiliations of Adam C. Snyder include Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research & City University of New York.

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The Role of Alpha-Band Brain Oscillations as a Sensory Suppression Mechanism during Selective Attention

TL;DR: Findings in the context of intersensory selective attention as well as intrasensory spatial and feature-based attention in the visual, auditory, and tactile domains are discussed.
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Anticipatory attentional suppression of visual features indexed by oscillatory alpha-band power increases: a high-density electrical mapping study.

TL;DR: Alpha-suppression mechanisms appear to operate during feature-based selection in much the same manner as has been shown for space-based attention.
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Oscillatory Alpha-Band Mechanisms and the Deployment of Spatial Attention to Anticipated Auditory and Visual Target Locations: Supramodal or Sensory-Specific Control Mechanisms?

TL;DR: It is suggested that parietally generated alpha-band mechanisms are central to attentional deployments across modalities but that they are invoked in a sensory-specific manner during deployment of spatial attention.
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Ready, Set, Reset: Stimulus-Locked Periodicity in Behavioral Performance Demonstrates the Consequences of Cross-Sensory Phase Reset

TL;DR: It is argued that fluctuations in visual-target detection result from cross-sensory phase reset, both at the moment it occurs and persisting for seconds thereafter, and it is demonstrated that periodicity in behavioral performance is strongly influenced by the probability of audiovisual co-occurrence.
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Cortical cross-frequency coupling predicts perceptual outcomes

TL;DR: Electroencephalographic recordings were made during a sustained-attention task to demonstrate that cross-frequency coupling has significant consequences for perceptual outcomes, and reveal that phase-detection relationships at higher frequencies are dependent on the phase of lower frequencies.