1988 - Fellow of Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
His primary scientific interests are in Neuroscience, Time perception, Cognition, Scalar expectancy and Memoria. His work on Dopaminergic, Basal ganglia and Frontal cortex as part of general Neuroscience study is frequently connected to Interval and Coincidence detection in neurobiology, therefore bridging the gap between diverse disciplines of science and establishing a new relationship between them. His Time perception research includes themes of Stimulus, Prefrontal cortex, Sensory system and Information processing.
His Cognition study deals with Vigilance intersecting with Transdermal, Rhinencephalon and Stopwatch. His Scalar expectancy research integrates issues from Cognitive psychology, Statistics and Approximate number system. His work deals with themes such as Developmental psychology, Acetylcholine and Neurotransmitter, which intersect with Memoria.
Time perception, Neuroscience, Cognition, Developmental psychology and Endocrinology are his primary areas of study. The various areas that he examines in his Time perception study include Stimulus, Cognitive psychology and Audiology. His Stimulus study incorporates themes from Conditioning and Reinforcement.
His Cognitive psychology research is multidisciplinary, incorporating perspectives in Working memory and Communication. The concepts of his Cognition study are interwoven with issues in Cognitive science, Vigilance and Information processing. His biological study spans a wide range of topics, including Internal medicine and Spatial memory.
Warren H. Meck focuses on Time perception, Neuroscience, Cognitive psychology, Interval and Perception. Time perception is a subfield of Cognition that Warren H. Meck tackles. His Cognition research integrates issues from Emotional regulation, Dorsal hippocampus and Gerontology.
He has researched Cognitive psychology in several fields, including Working memory, Episodic memory, Temporal perception and Nonverbal communication. His study focuses on the intersection of Perception and fields such as Autism with connections in the field of Information processing, Competence, Numerical cognition and Number sense. He has included themes like Stimulus, Arousal and Psychometrics in his Audiology study.
Warren H. Meck spends much of his time researching Time perception, Neuroscience, Cognitive psychology, Interval and Perception. In the subject of general Time perception, his work in Scalar expectancy is often linked to Perspective, thereby combining diverse domains of study. His Scalar expectancy research includes elements of Information theory, Algorithm, Cognitive architecture and Adaptive control.
While the research belongs to areas of Neuroscience, Warren H. Meck spends his time largely on the problem of Analysis of variance, intersecting his research to questions surrounding Dopaminergic pathways, Euphoriant, Amphetamine and Haloperidol. His Cognitive psychology research includes themes of Working memory and Temporal perception. His work is dedicated to discovering how Cognition, Stimulus are connected with Motor control, Thalamus, Cerebellum and Dentate nucleus and other disciplines.
This overview was generated by a machine learning system which analysed the scientist’s body of work. If you have any feedback, you can contact us here.
What makes us tick? Functional and neural mechanisms of interval timing
Catalin V. Buhusi;Warren H. Meck.
Nature Reviews Neuroscience (2005)
Scalar timing in memory.
John Gibbon;John Gibbon;Russell M. Church;Warren H. Meck.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences (1984)
A mode control model of counting and timing processes
Warren H. Meck;Russell M. Church.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Behavior Processes (1983)
Neuropharmacology of timing and time perception.
Warren H. Meck.
Cognitive Brain Research (1998)
Cortico-striatal circuits and interval timing: coincidence detection of oscillatory processes.
Matthew S. Matell;Warren H. Meck.
Cognitive Brain Research (2004)
Neuroanatomical and neurochemical substrates of timing.
Jennifer T Coull;Ruey-Kuang Cheng;Warren H Meck.
Neuropsychopharmacology (2011)
How emotions colour our perception of time.
Sylvie Droit-Volet;Warren H. Meck.
Trends in Cognitive Sciences (2007)
Selective adjustment of the speed of internal clock and memory processes.
Warren H. Meck.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: Animal Behavior Processes (1983)
Neuropsychological mechanisms of interval timing behavior.
Matthew S. Matell;Warren H. Meck.
BioEssays (2000)
Organizational effects of early gonadal secretions on sexual differentiation in spatial memory.
Christina L. Williams;Allison M. Barnett;Warren H. Meck.
Behavioral Neuroscience (1990)
If you think any of the details on this page are incorrect, let us know.
We appreciate your kind effort to assist us to improve this page, it would be helpful providing us with as much detail as possible in the text box below:
Duke University
Brown University
University of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Imperial College London
Boston University
Duke University
University of Clermont Auvergne
Johns Hopkins University
Duke University
Duke University
University of Georgia
Missouri University of Science and Technology
Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis
Ghent University
University of New South Wales
University of Western Ontario
University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences
Duke University
Broad Institute
Oklahoma State University
Wageningen University & Research
Goddard Institute for Space Studies
Istituto Superiore di Sanità
University of Washington
University of California, Los Angeles
University of Pretoria