Jules Davidoff mainly investigates Perception, Categorization, Cognitive psychology, Color vision and Communication. His study looks at the intersection of Perception and topics like Cognition with Cognitive science. Jules Davidoff has included themes like Anthropology and Tribe in his Categorization study.
Jules Davidoff undertakes interdisciplinary study in the fields of Cognitive psychology and Categorical perception through his research. Jules Davidoff works mostly in the field of Color vision, limiting it down to topics relating to Linguistic relativity and, in certain cases, Vocabulary and Response bias, as a part of the same area of interest. Jules Davidoff has researched Communication in several fields, including Cognitive neuroscience of visual object recognition, Audiology, Artificial intelligence and Pattern recognition.
His main research concerns Cognitive psychology, Perception, Cognitive neuroscience of visual object recognition, Cognition and Social psychology. His work in Cognitive psychology addresses subjects such as Developmental psychology, which are connected to disciplines such as Facial recognition system and Context. His Perception study combines topics from a wide range of disciplines, such as Color vision, Categorization and Communication.
The study incorporates disciplines such as Linguistic relativity, Language disorder and Psycholinguistics in addition to Categorization. As part of one scientific family, he deals mainly with the area of Cognitive neuroscience of visual object recognition, narrowing it down to issues related to the Object, and often Visual attention and Visual discrimination. His research in Cognition intersects with topics in Cognitive science and Language development.
His primary scientific interests are in Cognitive psychology, Cognitive neuroscience of visual object recognition, Social psychology, Perception and Developmental psychology. Jules Davidoff combines subjects such as Developmental trajectory and Categorical variable with his study of Cognitive psychology. Jules Davidoff interconnects Facial recognition system, Dissociation, Metric and Set in the investigation of issues within Cognitive neuroscience of visual object recognition.
His work carried out in the field of Social psychology brings together such families of science as Contextual information and Face perception. His Perception research incorporates themes from Selective attention and Linguistics, Phonetics. His Developmental psychology research incorporates themes from Context and Context effect.
The scientist’s investigation covers issues in Perception, Visual perception, Social psychology, Urban environment and Crossmodal. Among his Perception studies, there is a synthesis of other scientific areas such as Global information, Task and Poison control. His Visual perception research includes elements of Cognitive psychology, Visual processing, Selective attention, Selection and Target arrow.
His Social psychology study combines topics in areas such as Cognitive load, Working memory, Cognition and Contextual information. His research integrates issues of Linguistics, Sound symbolism and Communication in his study of Crossmodal. His Communication research is multidisciplinary, incorporating elements of Bouba/kiki effect, Phonetics and Written language.
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A Cross-Media Presence Questionnaire: The ITC-Sense of Presence Inventory
Jane Lessiter;Jonathan Freeman;Edmund Keogh;Jules Davidoff.
Presence: Teleoperators & Virtual Environments (2001)
Color categories are not universal: replications and new evidence from a stone-age culture.
Debi Roberson;Ian Davies;Jules Davidoff.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: General (2000)
Colour categories in a stone-age tribe
Jules Davidoff;Ian Davies;Debi Roberson.
Nature (1999)
Color categories: Evidence for the cultural relativity hypothesis
Debi Roberson;Jules B. Davidoff;Ian R. L. Davies;Laura R. Shapiro.
Cognitive Psychology (2005)
The categorical perception of colors and facial expressions: The effect of verbal interference
Debi Roberson;Jules Davidoff.
Memory & Cognition (2000)
Cognition through color
Jules B. Davidoff.
(1991)
Brain events related to normal and moderately scrambled faces
Nathalie George;Julie Evans;Nicole Fiori;Jules Davidoff.
Cognitive Brain Research (1996)
Similarity and categorisation: neuropsychological evidence for a dissociation in explicit categorisation tasks
Debi Roberson;Jules B. Davidoff;Nick Braisby.
Cognition (1999)
"Bouba" and "Kiki" in Namibia? A remote culture make similar shape-sound matches, but different shape-taste matches to Westerners.
Andrew J. Bremner;Serge Caparos;Jules Davidoff;Jan W. de Fockert.
Cognition (2013)
Language and perceptual categorisation
Jules B. Davidoff.
Trends in Cognitive Sciences (2001)
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