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Heiner Deubel

Researcher at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich

Publications -  132
Citations -  8755

Heiner Deubel is an academic researcher from Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich. The author has contributed to research in topics: Saccade & Saccadic masking. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 130 publications receiving 8178 citations. Previous affiliations of Heiner Deubel include Max Planck Society.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Saccade target selection and object recognition: evidence for a common attentional mechanism.

TL;DR: The spatial interaction of visual attention and saccadic eye movements was investigated in a dual-task paradigm that required a target-directed saccade in combination with a letter discrimination task and the results favor a model in which a single attentional mechanism selects objects for perceptual processing and recognition, and also provides the information necessary for motor action.
Book

The mind's eye : cognitive and applied aspects of eye movement research

TL;DR: Visual Information Processing and Saccadic Eye Movements in Reading and Language Processing and Computational Models of Eye Movement Control in Reading.
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Picture Changes During Blinks: Looking Without Seeing and Seeing Without Looking

TL;DR: In a prior pilot experiment as mentioned in this paper, observers inspected normal, high quality colour displays of everyday visual scenes while their eye movements were recorded, and the results obtained were very similar to those obtained in prior experiments showing failure to detect changes occurring simultaneously with saccades, flicker, ormudsplashes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of Remote Distractors on Saccade Programming: Evidence for an Extended Fixation Zone

TL;DR: The increase in latency under distractor conditions is interpreted in light of recent neurophysiological findings of inhibitory processes operating in the rostral region of the superior colliculus and suggests that inhibitory effects operate over large areas of the visual field.
Journal ArticleDOI

Predictive remapping of attention across eye movements

TL;DR: It is found that, briefly before the eyes start moving, attention drawn to the targets of upcoming saccades also shifted to those retinal locations that the targets would cover once the eyes had moved, facilitating future movements.