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Christoph Huber-Huber

Researcher at University of Trento

Publications -  19
Citations -  172

Christoph Huber-Huber is an academic researcher from University of Trento. The author has contributed to research in topics: Saccade & Saccadic masking. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 15 publications receiving 85 citations. Previous affiliations of Christoph Huber-Huber include Radboud University Nijmegen & University of Vienna.

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#EEGManyLabs : investigating the replicability of influential EEG experiments

Yuri G. Pavlov, +58 more
- 02 Apr 2021 - 
TL;DR: The #EEGManyLabs project as discussed by the authors is a large-scale international collaborative replication effort that aims to evaluate the replicability of EEG findings about the relationship between brain activity and cognitive phenomena.
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The peripheral preview effect with faces: Combined EEG and eye-tracking suggests multiple stages of trans-saccadic predictive and non-predictive processing.

TL;DR: The findings suggest that visual stability may involve three temporal stages: prediction about the saccadic target, integration of pre-saccadic and post-Saccadic information at around 50-90 ms post fixation onset, and post/substantial facilitation of rapid categorization.
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Using temporally aligned event-related potentials for the investigation of attention shifts prior to and during saccades.

TL;DR: A novel approach to investigate pre-saccadic attention shifts with the help of event-related potentials (ERPs) and points out how temporally aligned ERPs compare to ICA-based electroencephalogram (EEG) artifact correction procedures and to psychophysical dual-task approaches.
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S-ketamine influences strategic allocation of attention but not exogenous capture of attention.

TL;DR: The findings point to a more prominent role of s-ketamine during top-down controlled forms of attention that require suppression of automatic capture than during automatic capture itself, as well as for exogenous attentional capture in the presence of competing distractors.
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Strategic Distractor Suppression Improves Selective Control in Human Vision.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used EEG and eye movements to identify behavior and brain activity associated with proactive distractor suppression, and found that knowing about distractors before they appear causes a reduction in covert attentional selection of these objects and a reduction of overt deployment of the eyes to the location of the objects.