References
Donders FC (1869/1969) On the speed of mental processes. Acta Psychol 30:412–431
Gong P, Nikolaev A, van Leeuwen C (2003) Scale-invariant fluctuations of dynamical synchronization in human brain electrical activity. Neurosci Lett 336:33–36
Hogeboom M, van Leeuwen C (1997) Visual search strategy and perceptual organization covary with individual preference and structural complexity. Acta Psychol 95:141–164
Ito J, Nikolaev A, Luman M, Aukes MF, Nakatani C, van Leeuwen C (2003) Perceptual switching, eye-movements, and the bus-paradox. Perception 32:681–698
Nakatani H, van Leeuwen C (2005) Individual differences in perceptual switching rates: the role of occipital alpha and frontal theta band activity. Biol Cybern 93:343–354
Nakatani C, Ito J, Nikolaev RA, Gong P, van Leeuwen C (2006) Phase synchronization analysis of EEG during attentional blink. J Cogn Neurosci (in press)
Nikolaev AR, Gong P, van Leeuwen C (2005) Evoked phase synchronization between adjacent high-density electrodes in human scalp EEG: duration and time course related to behavior. Clin Neurophysiol 116(10):2403–2419
Stins J, van Leeuwen C (1993) Context influence on the perception of figures as conditional upon perceptual organization strategies. Percept Psychophys 53:34–42
Stroud JM (1967) The fine structure of psychological time. Ann NY Acad Sci 138:623–631
van Leeuwen C (2006) What needs to emerge to make you conscious? J Conscious Stud (in press)
van Leeuwen C, Bakker L (1995) Stroop can occur without Garner interference: Strategic and mandatory influences in multidimensional stimuli. Percept Psychophys 57:379–392
van Leeuwen C, Lachmann T (2004) Negative and positive congruence effects in letters and shapes. Percept Psychophys 66:908–925
Wagemans J (1993) Skewed symmetry: a nonaccidental property used to perceive visual forms. J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform 19:364–380
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
van Leeuwen, C. We see the world the way we do because of how our brain activity moves. Cogn Process 7 (Suppl 1), 4–6 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10339-006-0039-9
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10339-006-0039-9