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Hans Colonius

Researcher at University of Oldenburg

Publications -  125
Citations -  4036

Hans Colonius is an academic researcher from University of Oldenburg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Multisensory integration & Saccadic masking. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 124 publications receiving 3536 citations. Previous affiliations of Hans Colonius include Purdue University & Braunschweig University of Technology.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A consensus guide to capturing the ability to inhibit actions and impulsive behaviors in the stop-signal task

TL;DR: The goal is to facilitate a more accurate use of the stop-signal task and provide user-friendly open-source resources intended to inform statistical-power considerations, facilitate the correct implementation of the task, and assist in proper data analysis.
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Bimodal and trimodal multisensory enhancement: Effects of stimulus onset and intensity on reaction time

TL;DR: Manual reaction times to visual, auditory, and tactile stimuli presented simultaneously, or with a delay, were measured to test for multisensory interaction effects in a simple detection task with redundant signals and showed response enhancement increased with decreasing auditory and tactile stimulus intensity.
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Multisensory Interaction in Saccadic Reaction Time: A Time-Window-of-Integration Model

TL;DR: A quantitative stochastic framework, the time-window-of-integration model, is proposed to account for the temporal rules of multisensory integration and saccadic responses collected from a visualtactile focused attention task are shown to be consistent with theTime- window- of-Integration model predictions.
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Assessing age-related multisensory enhancement with the time-window-of-integration model.

TL;DR: The elderly participants were considerably slower than the younger participants under all conditions but showed a greater multisensory enhancement, that is, they seem to benefit more from bimodal stimulus presentation.
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A comparison of two response time models applied to perceptual matching

TL;DR: Comparisons between the two models suggest that the race model can account for perceptual matching data at least as well as the diffusion model, and without the constraints on the parameters provided by the experimental conditions the diffusion and the race models are indistinguishable.