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Heleen A. Slagter

Researcher at VU University Amsterdam

Publications -  121
Citations -  8827

Heleen A. Slagter is an academic researcher from VU University Amsterdam. The author has contributed to research in topics: Attentional blink & Working memory. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 110 publications receiving 7585 citations. Previous affiliations of Heleen A. Slagter include International Business Broker's Association & University of Wisconsin-Madison.

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Event-related potential activity in the basal ganglia differentiates rewards from nonrewards: temporospatial principal components analysis and source localization of the feedback negativity: commentary.

TL;DR: It is argued that this scalp‐recorded ERP component recorded from scalp EEG is highly unlikely to be generated by the basal ganglia, based on empirical and anatomical evidence.
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Subcortical, Modality-Specific Pathways Contribute to Multisensory Processing in Humans

TL;DR: It is shown that estimated strength of white-matter connections between the first relay station in the auditory processing stream, the cochlear nucleus, the auditory thalamus, and primary auditory cortex predicted one's ability to combine auditory and visual information in a visual search task.
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Bilateral Saccadic Eye Movements and Tactile Stimulation, but Not Auditory Stimulation, Enhance Memory Retrieval.

TL;DR: Rec retrieval was not enhanced after alternating left-right auditory stimulation compared to simultaneous bilateral auditory stimulation, and the possibility that alternating bilateral activation of the left and right hemisphere exerts its effects on memory by increasing the functional connectivity between the two hemispheres was discussed.
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No Evidence That Frontal Eye Field tDCS Affects Latency or Accuracy of Prosaccades.

TL;DR: It is concluded that it is unclear whether eye movements or other aspects of spatial attention can be affected through tDCS of the frontal eye fields, and the findings add to a growing number of null results, which have sparked concerns that tDCS outcomes are highly variable.
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Do Horizontal Saccadic Eye Movements Increase Interhemispheric Coherence? Investigation of a Hypothesized Neural Mechanism Underlying EMDR

TL;DR: The EEG analyses indicated no evidence that the EMs altered participants’ interhemispheric coherence or that improvements in recall were correlated with such changes in coherence, which cast doubt on the interhemospheric interaction hypothesis.