World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Neuroscience

D-Index
47
Citations
15750
World Ranking
6296
National Ranking
503

Psychology

D-Index
47
Citations
15771
World Ranking
6039
National Ranking
615

Overview

Kimron L. Shapiro is affiliated with the University of Birmingham in the United Kingdom and works primarily in the field of Neuroscience. Their research spans multiple subfields with a focus on Cognitive Neuroscience, Neurology, Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience, and Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis.

Their work covers a variety of topics related to brain function and behavior. Key areas include:

  • Neural dynamics and brain function
  • Neural and Behavioral Psychology Studies
  • EEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces
  • Visual perception and processing mechanisms
  • Memory and Neural Mechanisms
  • Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Studies
  • Advanced Memory and Neural Computing

Shapiro has contributed to several peer-reviewed papers, with notable recent publications such as:

  • Fronto-medial theta coordinates posterior maintenance of working memory content, 2022, Current Biology
  • Cognitive performance in idiopathic intracranial hypertension and relevance of intracranial pressure, 2021, Brain Communications
  • No evidence for a common self-bias across cognitive domains, 2020, Cognition
  • Impact of tDCS on working memory training is enhanced by strategy instructions in individuals with low working memory capacity, 2021, Scientific Reports
  • Event-related potential and EEG oscillatory predictors of verbal memory in mild cognitive impairment, 2020, Brain Communications

The majority of these papers are published in journals including Current Biology, Brain Communications, Cognition, and Scientific Reports.

Frequent co-authors in Shapiro's research include Simon Hanslmayr, Ole Jensen, Sara Assecondi, Danying Wang, and Katharina Duecker. Collaboration with these researchers has contributed to a consistent output of publications.

Shapiro's studies are often published in recurring venues such as bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Journal of Vision, Current Biology, Brain Communications, and BMC Psychology, indicating a broad dissemination of research findings across neuroscience and psychology audiences.

Best Publications

  • Temporary suppression of visual processing in an RSVP task: an attentional blink? .

    Jane E. Raymond;Kimron L. Shapiro;Karen M. Arnell

  • Electrophysiological Evidence for a Postperceptual Locus of Suppression During the Attentional Blink

    Edward K. Vogel;Steven J. Luck;Kimron L. Shapiro

  • Direct measurement of attentional dwell time in human vision

    John Duncan;Robert Ward;Kimron Shapiro

  • The attentional blink.

    K.L. Shapiro;J.E. Raymond;K.M. Arnell

  • Word meanings can be accessed but not reported during the attentional blink

    Steven J. Luck;Edward K. Vogel;Kimron L. Shapiro

  • Attention to visual pattern information produces the attentional blink in rapid serial visual presentation

    Kimron L. Shapiro;Jane E. Raymond;Karen M. Arnell

  • Modulation of long-range neural synchrony reflects temporal limitations of visual attention in humans.

    Joachim Gross;Frank Schmitz;Irmtraud Schnitzler;Klaus Kessler

  • The contingent negative variation (CNV) event-related potential (ERP) predicts the attentional blink

    Kimron Shapiro;Elwyn Martin;Isabel Arend;Stephen Johnston

  • Abnormal temporal dynamics of visual attention in spatial neglect patients.

    Masud Husain;Kimron Shapiro;Jesse Martin;Christopher Kennard

  • The role of alpha oscillations in temporal attention

    Simon Hanslmayr;Joachim Gross;Wolfgang Klimesch;Kimron L. Shapiro

  • Personal names and the attentional blink: a visual "cocktail party" effect.

    Kimron L. Shapiro;Judy Caldwell;Robyn E. Sorensen

  • Attention to visual pattern information produces the attentional blink in rapid serial visual presentation.

    Unknown

  • The Slow Time-Course of Visual Attention

    Robert Ward;John Duncan;Kimron Shapiro

  • Priming from the Attentional Blink: A Failure to Extract Visual Tokens but Not Visual Types

    Kimron Shapiro;Jon Driver;Robert Ward;Robyn E. Sorensen

  • Similarity determines the attentional blink.

    Jane E. Raymond;Kimron L. Shapiro;Karen M. Arnell

  • Control of Visuotemporal Attention by Inferior Parietal and Superior Temporal Cortex

    Kimron Shapiro;Anne P Hillstrom;Masud Husain

  • Theta Phase Synchronization Is the Glue that Binds Human Associative Memory.

    Andrew Clouter;Kimron L. Shapiro;Simon Hanslmayr

  • Resource sharing in the attentional blink

    Kimron Shapiro;Frank Schmitz;Sander Martens;Bernhard Hommel

  • Working memory load for faces modulates p300, n170, and n250r

    Helen M. Morgan;Christoph Klein;Stephan G. Boehm;Kimron L. Shapiro

  • Temporal allocation of visual attention: Inhibition or interference?

    Kimron L. Shapiro;Jane E. Raymond

  • Effects of similarity, difficulty, and nontarget presentation on the time course of visual attention

    Robert Ward;John Duncan;Kimron Shapiro

  • The attentional blink reflects retrieval competition among multiple rapid serial visual presentation items: tests of an interference model.

    Matthew I. Isaak;Kimron L. Shapiro;Jesse Martin

Frequent Co-Authors

Jane E. Raymond
Jane E. Raymond University of Birmingham
Anna C. Nobre
Anna C. Nobre Yale University
David Edmund Johannes Linden
David Edmund Johannes Linden Maastricht University
Simon Hanslmayr
Simon Hanslmayr University of Glasgow
Bernhard Hommel
Bernhard Hommel Shandong Normal University
Alfons Schnitzler
Alfons Schnitzler Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf
Joachim Gross
Joachim Gross University of Münster
Karen M. Arnell
Karen M. Arnell Brock University
Klaus Kessler
Klaus Kessler Aston University
Christoph Klein
Christoph Klein University of Freiburg

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Related Online Degrees & Career Pathways

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These online degrees offer the flexibility to advance your expertise while balancing other commitments, making them attractive pathways for those inspired by neuroscience and its real-world applications.

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