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Tim Cornelissen

Researcher at Goethe University Frankfurt

Publications -  18
Citations -  467

Tim Cornelissen is an academic researcher from Goethe University Frankfurt. The author has contributed to research in topics: Eye tracking & Visual search. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 18 publications receiving 354 citations. Previous affiliations of Tim Cornelissen include Lund University & Utrecht University.

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What to expect from your remote eye-tracker when participants are unrestrained.

TL;DR: This study provides practical insight into how popular remote eye-trackers perform when recording from unrestrained participants and provides a testing method for evaluating whether a tracker is suitable for studying a certain target population, and that manufacturers can use during the development of new eye- Trackers.
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Eye contact takes two – autistic and social anxiety traits predict gaze behavior in dyadic interaction:

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe several sub-systems of facial information processing for social impairments in psychopathology, including face processing, face recognition, and facial expression recognition.
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CancellationTools: All-in-one software for administration and analysis of cancellation tasks.

TL;DR: CancellationTools allows researchers and clinicians to flexibly administer computerized cancellation tasks using stimuli of their choice, and to directly analyze the data in a convenient manner, and provides extensive benefits and ease of use.
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Stuck on semantics: Processing of irrelevant object-scene inconsistencies modulates ongoing gaze behavior

TL;DR: It is argued that when the authors view natural environments, scene and object relationships are processed obligatorily, such that irrelevant semantic mismatches between scene andobject identity can modulate ongoing eye-movement behavior.
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Qualitative tests of remote eyetracker recovery and performance during head rotation

TL;DR: Investigating how eight eyetracking setups by three manufacturers coped with modeled behaviors in adults concluded that (prospective) eye-movement researchers who cannot restrict movement or nonoptimal head orientations in their participants might benefit from testing their eyetracker in nonOptimal conditions.