LEADER 08415cam a22004454a 4500001 9969246313506421 005 20221216222155.0 008 110622s2011 enkaf b 001 0 eng^^ 010 2011026866 016 7 015803718 |2Uk 016 7 101570008 |2DNLM 020 9780199539789 (hardback) 020 0199539782 (hardback) 035 (NjP)6924631-princetondb 035 (OCoLC)ocn713186814 035 |z(NjP)Voyager6924631 040 DLC |beng |cDLC |dYDX |dBTCTA |dYDXCP |dCDX |dUKMGB |dNLM |dBWX |dIUL 042 pcc 050 00 QP477.5 |b.O94 2011 060 00 2011 J-555 060 10 WW 400 082 00 612.8/4 |223 084 PSY008000PSY040000 |2bisacsh 245 04 The Oxford handbook of eye movements / |cedited by Simon P. Liversedge, Iain D. Gilchrist, Stefan Everling. 246 3 Handbook of eye movements 260 Oxford ;New York : |bOxford University Press, |c2011. 300 xix, 1027 p., [16] p. of col. plates : |bill. ; |c26 cm. 490 1 [Oxford library of psychology] 504 Includes bibliographical references and indexes. 505 00 |gPart 1. |tThe Eye Movement Repertoire: |g1. |tOculomotor behaviour in vertebrates and invertebrates / |rMichael F, Land; |g2. |tOrigins and applications of eye movement research / |rNicholas J. Wade and Benjamin W. Tatler; |g3. |tVestibular response / |rBernhard J.M. Hess; |g4. |tThe optokinetic reflex / |rC. Distler and K.-P. Hoffman; |g5. Saccades / |rIain D. Gilchrist; |g6. |tMicrosaccades / |rSusana Martinez-Conde and Stephen L. Macknik; |g7. |tOcular pursuit movements / |rGraham R. Barnes -- |gPart 2. |tNeural Basis of Eye Movements: |g8. |tThe oculomotor plant and its role in three-dimensional eye orientation / |rDora E. Angelaki; |g9. |tBrainstem pathways and premotor control / |rKathleen E. Cullen and Marion R. van Horn; |g10. |tThe oculomotor cerebellum / |rPeter Thier; |g11. |tThe superior colliculus / |rBrian J. White and Douglas P. Munoz; |g12. |tSaccadic eye movements and the basal ganglia / |rCorinne R. Vokoun, Safraaz Mahamed, and Michele A. Basso; |g13. |tThalamic roles in eye movements / |rMasaka Tanaka and Jun Kunimatsu; |g14. |tThe role of posterior parietal cortex in the regulation of saccadic eye movements / |rMartin Paré and Michael C. Dorris; |g15. |tFrontal cortex and flexible control of saccades / |rKevin Johnston and Stefan Everling; |g16. |tEye-head gaze shifts / |rBrian D. Corneil; |g17. |tInteractions of eye and eyelid movements / |rNeeraj J. Ghandi and Husam A. Katnani; |g18. |tNeural control of three-dimensional gaze shifts / |rJ. Douglas Crawford and Eliana M. Klier; |g19. |tThe neural basis of saccade target selection / |rJeffrey D. Schall and Jeremiah Y. Cohen; |g20. |tTesting animal models of human oculomotor control with neuroimaging / |rClayton E. Curtis; |g21. |tEye movements and transcranial magnetic stimulation / |rRené N, Müri and Thomas Nyffeler -- |gPart 3.: |tSaccades and Attention: |g22. |tDeterminants of saccade latency / |rPetroc Sumner; |g23. |tSaccadic decision-making / |rCasimir J.H. Ludwig; |g24. |tModels of overt attention/ |rWilson S. Geisler and Lawrence K. Cormack; |g25. The intriguing interactive relationship between visual attention and saccadic eye movements / |rÁrni Kristjánsson; |r26. |tOculomotor inhibition of return / |rRaymone M.Klein and Matthew D. Hilchey; |g27. |tMultisensory saccade generation / |rRichard Amlôt and Robert Walker -- |gPart 4. |tVisual Cognition and Eye Movements: |g28. Visual stability / |rBruce Bridgeman; |g29. |tEye movements and visual expertise in chess and medicine / |rEyal M. Reingold and Heather Sheridan; |g30. |tEye movements both reveal and influence problem solving / |rMichael J. Spivey and Rick Dale; |g31. |tEye movements and change detection / |rJames R. Brockmole and Michi Matsukura; |g32. |tEye movements and memory / |rMatthew S. Peterson and Melissa R. Beck; |g33. |tEye movements and scene perception / |rJohn M. Henderson; |g34. |tMechanisms of gaze control in natural vision / |rMary M. Hayhoe and Dana H. Ballard -- |gPart 5. |tEye Movement Pathology and Development: |g35. |tDevelopment from reflexive to controlled eye movements / |rBeatriz Luna and Katerina Velanova; |g36. |tChildren's eye movements during reading / |rHazel I. Blythe and Holly S.S.L. Joseph; |g37. |tOculomotor development pathology: an 'evo-devo' perspective / |rChris Harris; |g38. |tEye movements in psychiatric patients / |rJennifer E. McDowell, Brett A. Clementz, and John A. Sweeney; |g39. |tEye movements in autism spectrum disorder / |rValerie Benson and Sue Fletcher-Watson -- |gPart 6. |tEye Movement Control During Reading: |g40. |tOn the role of visual and oculomotor processes in reading / |rFrançoise Vitu; |g41. |tLinguistic and cognitive influences on eye movements during reading / |rKeith Rayner and Simon P. Liversedge; |g42. |tSerial-attention models of reading / |rErik D. Reichle; |g43. |tParallel graded attention models of reading / |rRalf Engbert and Reinhold Kliegl; |g44. |tBinocular coordination during reading / |rJulie A. Kirkby, Sarah J. White, and Hazel I. Blythe; |g45. |tFoveal and parafoveal processing during reading / |rJukka Hyönä; |g46. |tParafoveal-on-foveal effects on eye movements during reading / |rDenis Drieghe; |g47. |tEye movements and concurrent event-related potentials: eye fixation-related potential in reading / |rThierry Baccino -- |gPart 7.Language Processing and Eye Movements: |g48. |tLexical influences on eye movements in reading / |rBarbara J. Juhasz and Alexander Pollatsek; |g49. |tSyntactic influences on eye movements during reading / |rCharles Clifton, Jr. and Adrian Staub; |g50. |tThe influence of implausibility and anomaly on eye movements during reading / |rTessa Warren; |g51. |tThe influence of focus on eye movements during reading / |rRuth Filik, Kevin B. Paterson, and Antje Sauermann; |g52. |tEye movements in dialogue / |rHelene Kreysa and Martin J. Pickering; |g53. |tEye movements during Chinese reading / |rChuanli Zang, Simon P. Liversedge, Xuejun Bai, and Guoli Yan; |g54. |tThe mediation of eye movements by spoken language / |rGerry T.M. Altmann. 520 "In the past few years, there has been an explosion of eye movement research in cognitive science and neuroscience. This has been due to the availability of 'off the shelf' eye trackers, along with software to allow the easy acquisition and analysis of eye movement data. Accompanying this has been a realisation that eye movement data can be informative about many different aspects of perceptual and cognitive processing. Eye movements have been used to examine the visual and cognitive processes underpinning a much broader range of human activities, including, language production, dialogue, human computer interaction, driving behaviour, sporting performance, and emotional states. Finally, in the past thirty years, there have been real advances in our understanding of the neural processes that underpin eye movement behaviour. The Oxford Handbook of Eye Movements provides the first comprehensive review of the entire field of eye movement research. In over fifty chapters, it reviews the developments that have so far taken place, the areas actively being researched, and looks at how the field is likely to devlop in the coming years. The first section considers historical and background material, before moving onto section 2 on the neural basis of eye movements. The third and fourth sections looks at visual cognition and eye movements and eye movement pathology and development. The final sections consider eye movements and reading and language processing and eye movements. Bringing together cutting edge research from and international team of leading psychologists, neuroscientists, and vision researchers, this book is the definitive reference work in this field"-- |cProvided by publisher. 650 0 Eye |xMovements. |0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85046666 650 0 Cognitive neuroscience. |0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh91005166 700 1 Liversedge, Simon P. |0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n2011042476 700 1 Gilchrist, Iain D. |0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/nr2004002277 700 1 Everling, Stefan. |0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n2011042477 830 0 Oxford library of psychology 902 ek |bl |6a |7m |dv |f1 |e20120207 904 cjf |bo |hm |cb |e20111214 914 (OCoLC)ocn713186814 |bOCoLC |cmatch |d11172022 |eprocessed |f713186814