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Stefanie I. Becker

Researcher at University of Queensland

Publications -  111
Citations -  2907

Stefanie I. Becker is an academic researcher from University of Queensland. The author has contributed to research in topics: Visual search & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 93 publications receiving 2366 citations. Previous affiliations of Stefanie I. Becker include University of Osnabrück & University of Vienna.

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Strategic roadmap for an early diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease based on biomarkers

Giovanni B. Frisoni, +57 more
- 01 Aug 2017 - 
TL;DR: A strategic five-phase roadmap to foster the clinical validation of biomarkers in Alzheimer's disease, adapted from the approach for cancer biomarkers is developed.
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Eye Movement Control

TL;DR: Together, the papers in this special issue provide a timely update on eye movement control that reflects current hot topics in the field, spanning the range from cognitive science over applied psychology to clinical psychology and neuroscience.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of target-distractor relationships in guiding attention and the eyes in visual search.

TL;DR: The present study demonstrates that attention and eye movements can also be guided by a relational specification of how the target differs from the irrelevant distractors, suggesting that priming and contingent capture are really due to a relational selection mechanism.
Journal ArticleDOI

Eye movements reveal sustained implicit processing of others' mental states

TL;DR: This paper showed that adults engaged in a primary unrelated task display eye movement patterns consistent with mental state attributions across a sustained temporal period, and debriefing supported the hypothesis that this mentalizing was implicit.

BRIEF REPORT Eye Movements Reveal Sustained Implicit Processing of Others' Mental States

TL;DR: It is shown that adults engaged in a primary unrelated task display eye movement patterns consistent with mental state attributions across a sustained temporal period, and it appears there indeed exists a distinct implicit mental state attribution system.