University College London
United Kingdom
His primary scientific interests are in Neuroscience, Cognitive psychology, Visual perception, Perception and Functional magnetic resonance imaging. His Cognitive psychology research includes elements of Cognition, Crossmodal, Crossmodal attention and Gaze. His study in Visual perception is interdisciplinary in nature, drawing from both Segmentation, Stimulus, Visual processing, Sensory system and Term.
His Perception study incorporates themes from Cued speech and Cortex. His Functional magnetic resonance imaging study combines topics from a wide range of disciplines, such as Transcranial magnetic stimulation, Brain activity and meditation and Brain mapping. The Visual cortex study combines topics in areas such as N2pc, Visual memory and Visual N1.
Jon Driver mainly focuses on Neuroscience, Cognitive psychology, Visual perception, Visual cortex and Perception. His study in Neuroscience concentrates on Posterior parietal cortex, Functional magnetic resonance imaging, Transcranial magnetic stimulation, Parietal lobe and Somatosensory system. His Functional magnetic resonance imaging research is multidisciplinary, incorporating elements of Working memory, Brain activity and meditation, Sensory system and Brain mapping.
His work deals with themes such as Crossmodal, Communication, Audiology, Cognition and Eye movement, which intersect with Cognitive psychology. His work carried out in the field of Visual perception brings together such families of science as Stimulus, Visual processing, Visual system, Auditory perception and Extinction. Jon Driver combines subjects such as Visual extinction, N2pc, Visual N1 and Human brain with his study of Visual cortex.
The scientist’s investigation covers issues in Neuroscience, Cognitive psychology, Visual perception, Visual cortex and Transcranial magnetic stimulation. Posterior parietal cortex, Functional magnetic resonance imaging, Stimulation, Electroencephalography and Superior temporal sulcus are subfields of Neuroscience in which his conducts study. His biological study spans a wide range of topics, including Perception, Visual attention, Psychophysics, Audiology and Working memory.
His Visual perception research is multidisciplinary, incorporating perspectives in Stimulus, Time perception, Visual processing, Visual system and Auditory perception. His Visual cortex research incorporates elements of N2pc and Human brain. Jon Driver has researched Transcranial magnetic stimulation in several fields, including Parietal lobe, Frontal eye fields and Motor cortex.
Jon Driver mostly deals with Neuroscience, Visual perception, Posterior parietal cortex, Transcranial magnetic stimulation and Visual cortex. Neuroscience is frequently linked to Developmental psychology in his study. His Visual perception research integrates issues from Cognitive psychology, Visual processing, Visual system and Auditory perception.
His research in Cognitive psychology intersects with topics in Color vision and Psychophysics. As a member of one scientific family, Jon Driver mostly works in the field of Posterior parietal cortex, focusing on Parietal lobe and, on occasion, Lateralization of brain function, Attentional control and Angular gyrus. The various areas that he examines in his Transcranial magnetic stimulation study include Stimulus and Working memory.
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Gaze Perception Triggers Reflexive Visuospatial Orienting
Jon Driver;Greg Davis;Paola Ricciardelli;Polly Kidd.
Visual Cognition (1999)
Concurrent TMS-fMRI and psychophysics reveal frontal influences on human retinotopic visual cortex
Christian C. Ruff;Felix Blankenburg;Otto Bjoertomt;Sven Bestmann.
Current Biology (2006)
Attention and the crossmodal construction of space.
Jon Driver;Charles Spence.
Trends in Cognitive Sciences (1998)
Modulation of visual processing by attention and emotion: windows on causal interactions between human brain regions
Patrik Vuilleumier;Jon Driver.
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B (2007)
Covert Spatial Orienting in Audition: Exogenous and Endogenous Mechanisms
Charles J. Spence;Jon Driver.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance (1994)
The thing that should not be: predictive coding and the uncanny valley in perceiving human and humanoid robot actions
Ayse Pinar Saygin;Thierry Chaminade;Hiroshi Ishiguro;Jon Driver.
Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience (2012)
Audiovisual links in endogenous covert spatial attention.
Charles Spence;Jon Driver.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance (1996)
Seen gaze-direction modulates fusiform activity and its coupling with other brain areas during face processing.
Nathalie George;Jon Driver;Raymond J. Dolan.
NeuroImage (2001)
Attentional Load and Sensory Competition in Human Vision: Modulation of fMRI Responses by Load at Fixation during Task-irrelevant Stimulation in the Peripheral Visual Field
Sophie Schwartz;Patrik Vuilleumier;Chloe Hutton;Angelo Maravita.
Cerebral Cortex (2005)
Motor role of human inferior parietal lobe revealed in unilateral neglect patients.
Jason B. Mattingley;Masud Husain;Chris Rorden;Christopher Kennard.
Nature (1998)
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