Argiro Vatakis, Ph.D.

Affiliations: 
Experimental Psychology University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom 
Area:
Multisensory Integration, Crossmodal Processing
Google:
"Argiro Vatakis"
Mean distance: 16.06 (cluster 23)
 
SNBCP
Cross-listing: PsychTree

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.

Tachmatzidou O, Vatakis A. (2023) Attention and schema violations of real world scenes differentially modulate time perception. Scientific Reports. 13: 10002
Tachmatzidou O, Paraskevoudi N, Vatakis A. (2022) Exposure to multisensory and visual static or moving stimuli enhances processing of nonoptimal visual rhythms. Attention, Perception & Psychophysics. 84: 2655-2669
Sgouramani H, Moutoussis K, Vatakis A. (2019) Move Still: The Effects of Implied and Real Motion on the Duration Estimates of Dance Steps. Perception. 301006619854914
Tsiami A, Koutras P, Katsamanis A, et al. (2019) A behaviorally inspired fusion approach for computational audiovisual saliency modeling Signal Processing-Image Communication. 76: 186-200
Thanopoulos V, Psarou E, Vatakis A. (2018) Robust intentional binding for causally-linked sequences of naturalistic events but not for abstract event sequences. Acta Psychologica. 190: 159-173
Kostaki M, Vatakis A. (2016) Crossmodal binding rivalry: A "race" for integration between unequal sensory inputs. Vision Research
Vatakis A, Pastra K. (2016) A multimodal dataset of spontaneous speech and movement production on object affordances. Scientific Data. 3: 150078
Indraccolo A, Spence C, Vatakis A, et al. (2015) Combined effects of motor response, sensory modality, and stimulus intensity on temporal reproduction. Experimental Brain Research
Vatakis A, Ulrich R. (2014) Temporal processing within and across senses. Acta Psychologica. 147: 1
Sgouramani H, Vatakis A. (2014) "Flash" dance: how speed modulates percieved duration in dancers and non-dancers. Acta Psychologica. 147: 17-24
See more...