World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Psychology

D-Index
67
Citations
17577
World Ranking
2588
National Ranking
13

Overview

Jeff Miller is affiliated with the University of Otago in New Zealand and works primarily in the field of Neuroscience. Their research spans various subfields including Cognitive Neuroscience, Atmospheric Science, Aerospace Engineering, Social Psychology, and Artificial Intelligence.

Their main topics of work cover several areas: Neural and Behavioral Psychology Studies, Calibration and Measurement Techniques, Atmospheric and Environmental Gas Dynamics, Climate change and permafrost, Decision-Making and Behavioral Economics, Cryospheric studies and observations, and Neural dynamics and brain function.

Jeff Miller's recent publications include:

  • Outlier exclusion procedures for reaction time analysis: The cures are generally worse than the disease. (2023), Journal of Experimental Psychology General
  • Delta plots for conflict tasks: An activation-suppression race model (2021), Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
  • Questionable research practices may have little effect on replicability (2020), eLife
  • The time-course of distractor-based activation modulates effects of speed-accuracy tradeoffs in conflict tasks (2021), Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
  • Beyond mean reaction times: Combining distributional analyses with processing stage manipulations in the Simon task (2020), Cognitive Psychology

Frequent co-authors include:

  • Md Obaidul Haque
  • Rajagopalan Rengarajan
  • Mark Lubke
  • Md Nahid Hasan
  • Ashish Shrestha

Jeff Miller publishes regularly in several venues, with repeated publications in:

  • Antarctica A Keystone in a Changing World
  • Attention Perception & Psychophysics
  • Behavior Research Methods
  • Psychonomic Bulletin & Review
  • Acta Psychologica

Best Publications

  • Divided attention: Evidence for coactivation with redundant signals

    Jeff Miller

  • Jackknife-based method for measuring LRP onset latency differences

    Jeff Miller;Tui Patterson;Rolf Ulrich

  • Discrete versus continuous stage models of human information processing: In search of partial output.

    Jeff Miller

  • Queuing or Sharing? A Critical Evaluation of the Single-Bottleneck Notion ☆

    David Navon;Jeff Miller

  • Role of outcome conflict in dual-task interference.

    David Navon;Jeff Miller

  • Using the jackknife-based scoring method for measuring LRP onset effects in factorial designs.

    Rolf Ulrich;Jeff Miller

  • Measurement of ERP latency differences: a comparison of single-participant and jackknife-based scoring methods.

    Andrea Kiesel;Jeff Miller;Pierre Jolicoeur;Benoit Brisson

  • Effects of truncation on reaction time analysis.

    Rolf Ulrich;Jeff Miller

  • Reaction time analysis with outlier exclusion: bias varies with sample size.

    Jeff Miller

  • Timecourse of coactivation in bimodal divided attention

    Jeff Miller

  • The flanker compatibility effect as a function of visual angle, attentional focus, visual transients, and perceptual load: a search for boundary conditions.

    Jeff Miller

  • Discrete and continuous models of human information processing: theoretical distinctions and empirical results.

    Jeff Miller

  • Confidence and accuracy of near-threshold discrimination responses

    Craig Kunimoto;Jeff G. Miller;Harold Pashler

  • Electrophysiological evidence for temporal overlap among contingent mental processes.

    Jeff Miller;Steven A. Hackley

  • Cortical movement preparation before and after a conscious decision to move.

    Judy Arnel Trevena;Jeff Miller

  • Testing the race model inequality: an algorithm and computer programs.

    Rolf Ulrich;Jeff Miller;Hannes Schröter

  • Global precedence in attention and decision.

    Jeff Miller

  • Priming is not necessary for selective-attention failures: semantic effects of unattended, unprimed letters.

    Jeff Miller

  • Brain preparation before a voluntary action: evidence against unconscious movement initiation.

    Judy Trevena;Jeff Miller

  • Motor processes in simple, go/no-go, and choice reaction time tasks: a psychophysiological analysis.

    Jeff O. Miller;Kathy Low

Frequent Co-Authors

Rolf Ulrich
Rolf Ulrich University of Tübingen
Andrea Kiesel
Andrea Kiesel University of Freiburg
Rico Fischer
Rico Fischer University of Greifswald
Elizabeth A. Franz
Elizabeth A. Franz University of Otago
Eric Ruthruff
Eric Ruthruff University of New Mexico
Harold Pashler
Harold Pashler University of California, San Diego
Maryse Lassonde
Maryse Lassonde University of Montreal
James L. McClelland
James L. McClelland Stanford University
Guido P. H. Band
Guido P. H. Band Leiden University
Torsten Schubert
Torsten Schubert Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg

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