Browsing NTNU Open by Author "Meer, Audrey van der"
Now showing items 1-5 of 5
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A high-density EEG study of looming related brain activity in young infants
Kaasa, Solveig (Master thesis, 2010)As infants get more mobile from the second half of the first year of life the ability to perceive and efficiently respond to colliding objects becomes increasingly important. It is suggested that this ability develops as ... -
A high-density EEG study of looming related brain activity in young infants
Kaasa, Solveig (Master thesis, 2010)As infants get more mobile from the second half of the first year of life the ability to perceive and efficiently respond to colliding objects becomes increasingly important. It is suggested that this ability develops as ... -
Development of visual motion perception for prospective control: Brain and behavioral studies in infants
Agyei, Seth Bonsu; Van der Weel, Frederikus; Meer, Audrey van der (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2016)During infancy, smart perceptual mechanisms develop allowing infants to judge time-space motion dynamics more efficiently with age and locomotor experience. This emerging capacity may be vital to enable preparedness for ... -
Only three fingers write, but the whole brain works: A high-density EEG study showing advantages of drawing over typing for learning.
Meer, Audrey van der; Van der Weel, Frederikus (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2017)Are different parts of the brain active when we type on a keyboard as opposed to when we draw visual images on a tablet? Electroencephalogram (EEG) was used in young adults to study brain electrical activity as they were ... -
Predictive occluder tracking in infancy: Combining analysis of high density EEG with eye tracking movements
Twenhöfel, Antonia (Master thesis, 2013)An essential function of the human visual system is to perceive natural scenes as coherent even if objects are temporarily out of sight due to eye saccades or object occlusion. While a great deal of behavioural studies ...