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Julia Föcker

Researcher at University of Lincoln

Publications -  32
Citations -  742

Julia Föcker is an academic researcher from University of Lincoln. The author has contributed to research in topics: Crossmodal & Video game. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 25 publications receiving 566 citations. Previous affiliations of Julia Föcker include University of Marburg & University of Rochester.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Neural bases of selective attention in action video game players.

TL;DR: Reduced activity in the fronto-parietal network that is hypothesized to control the flexible allocation of top-down attention is compatible with the proposal that action game players may allocate attentional resources more automatically, possibly allowing more efficient early filtering of irrelevant information.
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Spatial coordinate systems for tactile spatial attention depend on developmental vision: evidence from event-related potentials in sighted and congenitally blind adult humans.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the default use of an external frame of reference for tactile localization seems to depend on developmental vision, rather than an externally anchored reference system.
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Preattentive processing of audio-visual emotional signals

TL;DR: The results suggest that emotional signals available through different sensory channels are automatically combined prior to response selection, and emotionally congruent bimodal stimuli were more efficiently processed than unimodal visual stimuli.
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The superiority in voice processing of the blind arises from neural plasticity at sensory processing stages.

TL;DR: Evidence is provided for an improvement of early voice processing stages and a reorganization of the person identification system as a neural correlate of compensatory behavioral improvements following congenital blindness.
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Neural Correlates of Enhanced Visual Attentional Control in Action Video Game Players: An Event-Related Potential Study

TL;DR: The main neural signature of enhanced perceptual and attentional control functions in AVGPs appears linked to an attention-dependent parietal process, indexed by the anterior N1 component, and possibly to more efficient higher-order perceptual processing, indexedby the P2 component.