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Virginie van Wassenhove

Virginie van Wassenhove

D-Index & Metrics

Neuroscience

D-Index
38
Citations
8264
World Ranking
8466
National Ranking
395

Overview

Virginie van Wassenhove is affiliated with the University of Paris-Saclay in France. Their research primarily spans the fields of neuroscience and psychology, with a notable focus on cognitive neuroscience and experimental and cognitive psychology.

The scientist's work includes an emphasis on neural dynamics and brain function, neuroscience and music perception, as well as visual perception and processing mechanisms. Other key research topics covered by their publications include EEG and brain-computer interfaces, psychological and temporal perspectives research, multisensory perception and integration, and functional brain connectivity studies.

Recent papers authored or co-authored by Virginie van Wassenhove include:

  • The Blursday database as a resource to study subjective temporalities during COVID-19 (2022, Nature Human Behaviour)
  • Individual Brain Charting dataset extension, second release of high-resolution fMRI data for cognitive mapping (2020, Scientific Data)
  • Neural entrainment to speech and nonspeech in dyslexia: Conceptual replication and extension of previous investigations (2021, Cortex)
  • Multisensory correlation computations in the human brain identified by a time-resolved encoding model (2022, Nature Communications)
  • Rodents monitor their error in self-generated duration on a single trial basis (2022, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences)

Frequent collaborators in their research include Gaetano Valenza, Sophie K. Herbst, Vincenzo Catrambone, Simon Grondin, and Ignacio Polti.

Virginie van Wassenhove has published extensively in several scientific venues, with multiple contributions to bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory). Other prominent venues featuring their work include the Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, Scientific Reports, PLoS ONE, and Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews.

Best Publications

  • Visual speech speeds up the neural processing of auditory speech

    Virginie van Wassenhove;Ken W. Grant;David Poeppel

  • Good practice for conducting and reporting MEG research

    Joachim Gross;Sylvain Baillet;Gareth R. Barnes;Richard N. A. Henson

  • Temporal window of integration in auditory-visual speech perception.

    Virginie van Wassenhove;Ken W. Grant;David Poeppel

  • Evidence for a hierarchy of predictions and prediction errors in human cortex

    Catherine Wacongne;Etienne Labyt;Virginie van Wassenhove;Tristan Bekinschtein

  • Speech perception at the interface of neurobiology and linguistics

    David Poeppel;William J Idsardi;Virginie van Wassenhove

  • Hearing Lips and Seeing Voices: How Cortical Areas Supporting Speech Production Mediate Audiovisual Speech Perception

    Jeremy I. Skipper;Virginie van Wassenhove;Howard C. Nusbaum;Steven L. Small

  • Distortions of subjective time perception within and across senses.

    Virginie van Wassenhove;Dean V. Buonomano;Shinsuke Shimojo;Ladan Shams

  • Auditory-visual fusion in speech perception in children with cochlear implants

    Efrat A. Schorr;Nathan A. Fox;Virginie van Wassenhove;Eric I. Knudsen

  • Disruption of hierarchical predictive coding during sleep

    Melanie Strauss;Melanie Strauss;Jacobo D. Sitt;Jacobo D. Sitt;Jean-Remi King;Jean-Remi King;Maxime Elbaz

  • Minding time in an amodal representational space

    Virginie van Wassenhove

  • The experience of time: neural mechanisms and the interplay of emotion, cognition and embodiment

    Marc Wittmann;Virginie van Wassenhove

  • Temporal event structure and timing in schizophrenia: preserved binding in a longer "now".

    Brice Martin;Anne Giersch;Caroline Huron;Caroline Huron;Virginie van Wassenhove;Virginie van Wassenhove

  • Distinct contributions of low- and high-frequency neural oscillations to speech comprehension

    Anne Kösem;Virginie Van Wassenhove

  • Encoding of event timing in the phase of neural oscillations.

    Anne Kösem;Alexandre Gramfort;Virginie van Wassenhove

  • The neural substrates of subjective time dilation.

    Marc Wittmann;Marc Wittmann;Virginie van Wassenhove;A D Bud Craig;Martin P Paulus;Martin P Paulus

  • Detection of auditory (cross-spectral) and auditory–visual (cross-modal) synchrony

    Ken W. Grant;Virginie van Wassenhove;David Poeppel

  • Simultaneous and independent acquisition of multisensory and unisensory associations.

    Aaron R Seitz;Robyn Kim;Virginie van Wassenhove;Virginie van Wassenhove;Ladan Shams

  • Auditory Cortical Plasticity in Learning to Discriminate Modulation Rate

    Virginie van Wassenhove;Srikantan S. Nagarajan

  • Speech through ears and eyes: interfacing the senses with the supramodal brain

    Unknown

  • The effect of attention and working memory on the estimation of elapsed time

    Ignacio Polti;Ignacio Polti;Benoît. Martin;Virginie van Wassenhove

  • Psychological and neural mechanisms of subjective time dilation.

    Virginie van Wassenhove;Virginie van Wassenhove;Virginie van Wassenhove;Marc Wittmann;Marc Wittmann;A. D. (Bud) Craig;Martin P. Paulus;Martin P. Paulus

Frequent Co-Authors

David Poeppel
David Poeppel New York University
Christian F. Doeller
Christian F. Doeller Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences
Marc Wittmann
Marc Wittmann Institut für Grenzgebiete der Psychologie und Psychohygiene
Stanislas Dehaene
Stanislas Dehaene Collège de France
Franck Ramus
Franck Ramus École Normale Supérieure
Ladan Shams
Ladan Shams University of California, Los Angeles
Martin P. Paulus
Martin P. Paulus Laureate Institute for Brain Research
Anne Giersch
Anne Giersch University of Strasbourg
Lionel Naccache
Lionel Naccache Sorbonne University
Jean-Rémi King
Jean-Rémi King École Normale Supérieure

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