J
Jüri Allik
Researcher at University of Tartu
Publications - 228
Citations - 17436
Jüri Allik is an academic researcher from University of Tartu. The author has contributed to research in topics: Personality & Big Five personality traits. The author has an hindex of 57, co-authored 223 publications receiving 15859 citations. Previous affiliations of Jüri Allik include Estonian Academy of Sciences & University of Jyväskylä.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Planning of saccadic eye movements.
Jüri Allik,Mai Toom,Aavo Luuk +2 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that beside the motor maps representing the desired final position of the eye or a fixed movement vector, another processing stage is required in which the basic parameters of SEM, direction and amplitude, are clearly separable.
Journal ArticleDOI
SNP-Based Heritability Estimates of Common and Specific Variance in Self- and Informant-Reported Neuroticism Scales
Anu Realo,Anu Realo,Peter J. van der Most,Jüri Allik,Jüri Allik,Tõnu Esko,Bertus F. Jeronimus,Bertus F. Jeronimus,Liisi Kööts-Ausmees,René Mõttus,René Mõttus,Felix C. Tropf,Felix C. Tropf,Harold Snieder,Harold Snieder,Johan Ormel +15 more
TL;DR: It is indicated that a large proportion of the heritability of Neuroticism is not captured by additive genetic effects of common SNPs, with some evidence for Gene × Environment interaction across cohorts.
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Elucidating the links between personality traits and diabetes mellitus : examining the role of facets, assessment methods, and selected mediators
TL;DR: Self- and informant-rated Five-Factor Model personality domains and facets associated with diabetes diagnosis and the strongest mediator of the personality–diabetes association was BMI, explaining 30–50% of the observed associations.
Journal ArticleDOI
Timing of visual events for motion discrimination.
Jüri Allik,Aleksander Pulver +1 more
TL;DR: The observer's task was to identify the temporal order of the two adjacent luminance excursions one of which was a step-function and the other a linear increase in luminance starting from zero and reaching various final amplitude A after some period of time D.
Journal ArticleDOI
Unintentionality of affective attention across visual processing stages
TL;DR: It was concluded that affective attention went from completely unintentional during the EPN to partially unintentional during P3 and SW where top-down signals, respectively, complemented and modulated bottom-up differences in stimulus prioritization.