Events
Kommende
In this EyeHub Forum, Alexander Refsum Jensenius (Director for RITMO and Professor of music technology) will give a presentation on the use of eye tracking glasses outside of the lab.
Tidligere
We are happy to announce that the 2024 Annual EyeHub Lecture will be held by Professor Bruno Laeng (Department of Psychology), who will talk about the neurological phenomenon that the pupil adjusts to the brightness of illusory or imagined objects.
The one-day workshop organized by EyeHub will provide an introduction to pupillometry research, covering aspects related to design, experiment building, and data analysis.
In this EyeHub Forum, Ole Johan Sando (Associate Professor at Queen Maud University College) will present research using eye-tracking in VR to investigate children's risk assessment.
In this EyeHub Forum, Athanasios Protopapas (Professor at Department of Special Needs Education) will present results from a study exploring the effects of repeated reading on eye movement.
In this Forum, the recipients of the 2024 EyeHub MA Scholarship, Silvia Allegretta, Ana Boskovic, and Jakob Scherm Eikner will present their MA projects.
In this edition of the EyeHub Forum, Camilo R. Ronderos (Post-doc at IFIKK) will present two pupillometry experiments on semantic imprecision.
Are you considering to use eye-tracking in your MA-thesis, or just interested in exciting technologies and how they can be used in cognitive research? EyeHub is organizing an introductory workshop to eye-tracking led by Camilo Rodriguez Ronderos.
In this EyeHub Forum, Claire Prendergast (Postdoc at IFIKK) will present a research project exploring how well children predict the outcome of kindergarden stories that are updated by idiomatic expressions through picture selection of the story outcomes.
In this extraordinary EyeHub lecture, Jochen Laubrock (Research Scientist at the University of Potsdam) will present recent research that addresses how ongoing higher-level cognitive processes guide the prediction of where to attend during reading and scene perception.
In this EyeHub Forum Line Sj?tun Helganger (PhD Fellow at the University of South-Eastern Norway) will present a study investigating the developmental trajectory of Norwegian 3- to 5-year-olds’ sensitivity to intonational cues in utterances containing ogs?.
EyeHub, in collaboration with the Language Research Forum, is delighted to announce that Professor Debra Titone (McGill University, Department of Psychology) will give an extraordinary talk at Henrik Wergelands house March 15th.
In the first EyeHub Forum of 2024, Rebecca Kvisler Iversen will present an eye-tracking study looking into how sensitivity to conventions in neurotypical children might influence their comprehension of irony.
Qasim Ali (PhD research fellow at H?gskulen i Vestlandet) will be giving a presentation on eye-tracking as a supporting tool for vision experts in the health sciences
In this edition of the EyeHub Forum, Marianna Kyriacou (post-doc, University of Oslo) will present preliminary findings in an ongoing project comparing eye-movement behavior of adults with and without ADHD, when processing verbal irony.
For the 2023 EyeHub Lecture, Elke B. Lange (Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics) will give a lecture on how musical processing is affected by visual information, or affects ocular motor movements.
In this full-day workshop Elke B. Lange (Max Planck Institute of Empirical Aesthetics) will give an introduction to analyzing blink data with mixed effect models.
In this talk Kristen Thornton (Adjunct Professor, Gallaudet University) will review data from a novel word learning project where eye tracking was used to examine looking behaviors while children with and without cochlear implants learned novel words.
In this talk Pedro Lencastre (PhD candidate in the field of Intelligent Health at OsloMet) will present new mathematical and Machine Learning methods to classify Gaze Trajectories and identify signatures of health conditions.
Camilo Rodriguez Ronderos (Postdoctoral Fellow, IFIKK) will present evidence from pupillometry in support of theoretical accounts of the pragmatics of imprecision, and discuss possible linking hypotheses between pupil dilation and pragmatic language processing.
EyeHub invites: An eye-tracking workshop with Camilo Rodriguez Ronderos
Laura Bishop (Researcher at RITMO Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies in Rhythm, Time and Motion) will present a study that investigates how classical string quartet musicians are affected by playing conditions designed to enable, perturb, or enhance experiences of musical togetherness.
Emma Krane Mathisen (MA-student in English language and linguistics) will give a presentation of her master's project on the processing differences between metaphors and similes.
Bob McMurray (F. Wendell Miller Professor, University of Iowa) will give a presentation that argues against overly sophisticated analysis and for simpler approaches to eye-movement analysis.
Dzan Zelihic (PhD Fellow, UiO) will be giving a presentation on using Eye-tracking and the Visual World Paradigm to investigate interference from adjacent items in word recognition.