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Bernhard Hommel

Researcher at Leiden University

Publications -  503
Citations -  32293

Bernhard Hommel is an academic researcher from Leiden University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cognition & Action (philosophy). The author has an hindex of 85, co-authored 475 publications receiving 28851 citations. Previous affiliations of Bernhard Hommel include Dresden University of Technology & Leiden University Medical Center.

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The Theory of Event Coding (TEC): a framework for perception and action planning.

TL;DR: A new framework for a more adequate theoretical treatment of perception and action planning is proposed, in which perceptual contents and action plans are coded in a common representational medium by feature codes with distal reference, showing that the main assumptions are well supported by the data.
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Event files: feature binding in and across perception and action

TL;DR: It is argued that the brain addresses problems of integrating distributed codes in perception by creating multi-layered networks of bindings - 'event files' - that temporarily link codes of perceptual events, the current task context, and the actions performed therein.
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Event Files: Evidence for Automatic Integration of Stimulus-Response Episodes

TL;DR: This work has shown that if attention subserves action control, object files may include action-related information as well as stimulus features, and featurebinding may not be restricted to stimulus features but also includefeatures of the responses made to the respective stimulus.
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Transformations in the Couplings Among Intellectual Abilities and Constituent Cognitive Processes Across the Life Span

TL;DR: Processing robustness, a frequently overlooked aspect of processing, predicted fluid intelligence beyond processing speed in old age but not in childhood, suggesting that the causes of more compressed functional organization of intelligence differ between maturation and senescence.
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A feature-integration account of sequential effects in the Simon task.

TL;DR: These findings rule out gating/suppression accounts that attribute sequential dependencies to response selection difficulties and demonstrate that accounting for the sequential dependencies of Simon effects does not require the assumption of information gating or response suppression.