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Raymond van Ee

Researcher at Radboud University Nijmegen

Publications -  139
Citations -  4491

Raymond van Ee is an academic researcher from Radboud University Nijmegen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Binocular rivalry & Binocular vision. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 136 publications receiving 3995 citations. Previous affiliations of Raymond van Ee include Massachusetts Institute of Technology & University of California, Berkeley.

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The time course of binocular rivalry reveals a fundamental role of noise

TL;DR: This work extensively studied contrast dependence of dominance and transition durations and that of the occurrence of return transitions and found that noise is a crucial force in rivalry, frequently dominating the deterministic forces.
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Horizontal and vertical disparity, eye position, and stereoscopic slant perception

TL;DR: It is found that VSR and sensed eye position are both used to interpret the measured horizontal disparities and the weights varied across viewing conditions because the informativeness of the signals they employ vary from one situation to another.
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Acute alerting effects of light: A systematic literature review.

TL;DR: The results show that increasing the intensity of polychromatic white light has been found to increase subjective ratings of alertness in a majority of studies, though a substantial proportion of studies failed to find significant effects, possibly due to small sample sizes or high baseline light intensities.
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Acceptance of immersive head-mounted virtual reality in older adults.

TL;DR: Attitudes towards immersive virtual reality changed from neutral to positive after a first exposure to immersivevirtual reality, but not after exposure to time-lapse videos, implying that the contribution of VR applications to health in older adults will neither be hindered by negative attitudes nor by cybersickness.
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Multisensory congruency as a mechanism for attentional control over perceptual selection.

TL;DR: It is argued that recently found neurons that combine voluntarily initiated attentional functions across sensory modalities provide a mechanism for structuring multisensory inputs that are then used to selectively modulate early (unimodal) cortical processing, boosting the gain of task-relevant features for willful control over perceptual awareness.