Roger HS Carpenter

Affiliations: 
University of Cambridge, Cambridge, England, United Kingdom 
Area:
Neurophysiology, Eye Movements
Website:
http://www.cai.cam.ac.uk/people/rhsc/
Google:
"Roger Carpenter"
Mean distance: 14.16 (cluster 29)
 
SNBCP

Children

Sign in to add trainee
Quentin Huys research assistant Cambridge
Sanjay G. Manohar research assistant 1998-2002 Cambridge
Adar Pelah grad student
Francesco M. S. Giorlando grad student 2008-2009 Cambridge
Andrew J. Anderson post-doc 2003-2005 Cambridge
BETA: Related publications

Publications

You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect.

Stainer MJ, Carpenter RH, Brotchie P, et al. (2016) Sequences show rapid motor transfer and spatial translation in the oculomotor system. Vision Research
Ameqrane I, Pouget P, Wattiez N, et al. (2014) Implicit and explicit timing in oculomotor control. Plos One. 9: e93958
Anderson AJ, Stainer MJ, Brotchie P, et al. (2014) Target direction rather than position determines oculomotor expectation in repeating sequences. Experimental Brain Research. 232: 2187-95
Giorlando F, Markanday S, Anderson A, et al. (2014) Temporal order assessment in patients with bipolar disorder Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences. 126: 216-216
Roos JC, Lachmann RH, Carpenter RH, et al. (2011) Latency vs saccadic parameters in lysosomal trials. Ophthalmology. 118: 794-794.e1
Anderson AJ, Carpenter RH. (2010) Saccadic latency in deterministic environments: getting back on track after the unexpected happens. Journal of Vision. 10: 12
Carpenter RH, Reddi BA, Anderson AJ. (2009) A simple two-stage model predicts response time distributions. The Journal of Physiology. 587: 4051-62
Carpenter R. (2008) Beyond the impact factory. Current Biology. 18
Anderson AJ, Yadav H, Carpenter RH. (2008) Directional prediction by the saccadic system. Current Biology : Cb. 18: 614-8
Anderson AJ, Carpenter RH. (2008) The effect of stimuli that isolate S-cones on early saccades and the gap effect. Proceedings. Biological Sciences / the Royal Society. 275: 335-44
See more...