Paul Ryan MacNeilage

Affiliations: 
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, München, Bayern, Germany 
Area:
Visual-vestibular interaction
Google:
"Paul MacNeilage"
Mean distance: 14.1 (cluster 29)
 
SNBCP

Parents

Sign in to add mentor
Marc David Hauser research assistant 1994-1996 Harvard
Martin Banks grad student 2000-2007 UC Berkeley
 (Psychophysical investigations of visual -vestibular interactions in human spatial orientation.)
Stefan Glasauer post-doc 2010- Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich
Dora Angelaki post-doc 2007-2010 Washington University
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.

Greene MR, Balas BJ, Lescroart MD, et al. (2024) The visual experience dataset: Over 200 recorded hours of integrated eye movement, odometry, and egocentric video. Journal of Vision. 24: 6
Halow SJ, Hamilton A, Folmer E, et al. (2023) Impaired stationarity perception is associated with increased virtual reality sickness. Journal of Vision. 23: 7
Halow S, Liu J, Folmer E, et al. (2023) Motor Signals Mediate Stationarity Perception. Multisensory Research. 36: 703-724
Sinnott CB, Hausamann PA, MacNeilage PR. (2023) Natural statistics of human head orientation constrain models of vestibular processing. Scientific Reports. 13: 5882
Sinnott C, Hausamann P, MacNeilage PR. (2023) Natural statistics of human head orientation constrain models of vestibular processing. Research Square
Hausamann P, Sinnott CB, Daumer M, et al. (2021) Evaluation of the Intel RealSense T265 for tracking natural human head motion. Scientific Reports. 11: 12486
Hausamann P, Sinnott C, MacNeilage PR. (2020) Positional head-eye tracking outside the lab: an open-source solution. Proceedings. Eye Tracking Research & Applications Symposium. 2020
Bergmann J, Bardins S, Prawitz C, et al. (2020) Perception of postural verticality in roll and pitch while sitting and standing in healthy subjects. Neuroscience Letters. 730: 135055
Dietrich H, Heidger F, Schniepp R, et al. (2020) Head motion predictability explains activity-dependent suppression of vestibular balance control. Scientific Reports. 10: 668
Dietrich H, Heidger F, Schniepp R, et al. (2020) P85 Head motion predictability explains phase- and speed-dependent suppression of vestibular balance control during walking Clinical Neurophysiology. 131
See more...