M.Sc. Luke Tudge
Forschungsinteressen
I am interested in whether and how general executive functions play a role in the planning of eye movements. In particular I am interested in dual-tasking and response inhibition. Do the same factors that impair or improve dual-task performance with manual responses also influence eye movements? Or does the visual system rather have its own separate processes that run independently of other concurrent activities? I am currently investigating the influences of task preparation and of irrelevant distractions.
Lehre
- Seminar: Ausgewählte Themen der Allgemeinen Psychologie II
Publikationen
- Tudge L, McSorley E, Brandt, SA, Schubert T (2017). 'Setting things straight: A comparison of measures of saccade trajectory deviation'. Behavior Research Methods, doi:10.3758/s13428-016-0846-6
- Jiang J, Borowiak K, Tudge L, Otto C, von Kriegstein K (2016). 'Neural mechanisms of eye contact when listening to another person talking'. Social Cognitive & Affective Neuroscience, doi:10.1093/scan/nsw127
- Tudge L, Schubert T (2016). 'Accessory stimuli speed reaction times and reduce distraction in a target-distractor task'. Journal of Vision, doi:10.1167/16.7.11
- Rzepa E, Tudge L, McCabe C (2015). 'The CB1 neutral antagonist tetrahydrocannibivarin (THCv) reduces default mode network and increases executive control network resting state functional connectivity in healthy volunteers'. International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology, doi:10.1093/ijnp/pyv092
- Tudge L, Williams C, Cowen PJ, McCabe C (2014). 'Neural effects of cannabinoid CB1 neutral antagonist tetrahydrocannabivarin (THCv) on food reward and aversion in healthy volunteers'. International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology, doi:10.1093/ijnp/pyu094