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Robert Henricus Johannes van der Lubbe

Researcher at University of Twente

Publications -  78
Citations -  2321

Robert Henricus Johannes van der Lubbe is an academic researcher from University of Twente. The author has contributed to research in topics: Motor imagery & Lateralized readiness potential. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 78 publications receiving 2128 citations. Previous affiliations of Robert Henricus Johannes van der Lubbe include University of Lübeck & Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznań.

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Aging and the Simon task.

TL;DR: A visual Simon task was used to study the influence of aging on visuospatial attention and inhibitory control processes, and indicated that transmission from posterior sites to motor cortex may be affected by age.
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Delayed attentional engagement in the attentional blink

TL;DR: There is a delay between detection and the selection of target candidates for consolidation in short-term memory during the attentional blink, resulting in improvement in T2 report, suggesting that processing of T1 was already completed or was at least protected when the cue was presented.
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Qualitative Differences Between Conscious and Nonconscious Processing? On Inverse Priming Induced by Masked Arrows.

TL;DR: In inverse priming, the alternative response is directly primed by perceptual interactions of primes and masks, and there is no need to assume separate pathways for nonconscious and conscious processing.
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Spatiotemporal overlap between brain activation related to saccade preparation and attentional orienting.

TL;DR: The saccade-locked analysis indicated that the FEF plays an important role in triggering saccades, but the role of vIPS appears to be minimal, which disfavors the premotor theory of attention and suggests that the relation between attention and action is less direct.
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Traces Left on Visual Selective Attention by Stimuli That Are Not Consciously Identified

TL;DR: It is reported that unidentified stimuli have effects on a physiological indicator of the attentional system, and unidentifiable information may leave some trace for attention-controlled selection of the following event.