Professor Glynn Humphries
Posted February 11th, 2008 by maarten.vannest...
Professor Glynn Humphries, is professor of Cognitive psychology At the university. As such he was interviewed by M&IT for the series "anatomyofameeting". The article apeared in February 2008 under the titel The really wild show. He explains about the brain and visuals in learning.
G.W.Humphreys@Bham.ac.uk
He has broad research interests covering:
* visual cognition (object & word recognition, visual attention)
* cognitive neuropsychology (agnosia, neglect, frontal lobe disorders, dyslexia)
* computational modelling of normal and disordered cognition
* functional imaging and TMS
some of his publications:
Braithwaite, J.J., Humphreys, G.W., & Hodsoll, J. (2004) Effects of colour on preview search: Anticipatory and inhibitory biases for colour. Spatial Vision, 17, 389-415
Humphreys, G.W., Riddoch, M.J., Forti, S. & Ackroyd, K. (2004) Action influences spatial perception: Neuropsychological evidence. Visual Cognition, 11, 401-427.
Riddoch, M.J. & Humphreys, G.W. (2004) Object identification in simultanagnosia: When wholes are not the sum of their parts. Cognitive Neuropsychology, 11, 423-442.
For Further Details Please contact BBS
The School of Psychology
The University of Birmingham
Edgbaston
Birmingham
B15 2TT
subtitle:
Visual information for learning
residing institution (University, company,...):
University of Birmingham
primary language:
English















