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Chantal Kemner

Researcher at Utrecht University

Publications -  165
Citations -  9769

Chantal Kemner is an academic researcher from Utrecht University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Autism & Pervasive developmental disorder. The author has an hindex of 50, co-authored 162 publications receiving 9040 citations. Previous affiliations of Chantal Kemner include Maastricht University & University of Michigan.

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Multisensory integration and attention in Autism Spectrum Disorder : Evidence from event-related potentials

TL;DR: It was concluded that individuals with ASD are able to process multisensory emotional stimuli, but this is differently modulated by attention mechanisms in these participants, especially those associated with divided attention.
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The relationship between local and global processing and the processing of high and low spatial frequencies studied by event-related potentials and source modeling

TL;DR: Results extend former results showing that global and local processing is dependent on spatial frequency and mapped retinotopically in the visual cortex by studying the event-related potentials and source models elicited by unfiltered, low- or high-pass filtered hierarchical stimuli.
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Time effects on event-related brain potentials and vigilance performance.

TL;DR: The ERP results do not support the hypothesis that a decrement in performance is caused by increasing difficulty discriminating targets from nontargets, and a gradual decline in effort or resources allocated to the task might be an alternative explanation of performance deterioration.
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Reduced prepulse inhibition as an early vulnerability marker of the psychosis prodrome in adolescence

TL;DR: Results suggest that PPI is a relatively early vulnerability marker, while changes in other neurophysiological measures may only be detected or affected later during the illness course, and Antipsychotic and antidepressant medication may aid in elevating PPI levels and potentially have a neuroprotective effect.
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Emotion processing in the infant brain: The importance of local information

TL;DR: The results reveal the importance of higher spatial frequencies for emotion discrimination in infants (particularly at the N290 and P400 components), and related these findings to current models on the neural basis of facial‐emotion processing.