13th European Conference on Eye Movements
14-18 August 2005, Bern, Switzerland


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ECEM13 workshops

"Workshop" means (equivalent to symposium) a block of 4-6 related contributions, each lasting 15+5 minutes, put together by an organizer, who is responsible for calling and coordinating the presenters and chairing the session. The time slot is 90 minutes for a workshop of 4 participants and 120 minutes for 6 participants, including the chairperson's contributions. One organizer per workshop is entitled to participate at ECEM13 without paying the conference fee.

Full program as PDF download (166 KB)

Workshop organizers and titles:


W. F. Bischof (University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada):
Formal models of eye fixation behaviour

Y. Chen (Harvard Medical School/McLean Hospital, USA):
Cortical mechanisms of smooth pursuit dysfunction in schizophrenia

K.C. Erkelens (University Utrecht, The Netherlands):
Properties of prediction in oculomotor control

John Henderson & Fernanda Ferreira (Michigan State University, USA):
Integrating language and vision

B. Kersten (University of Bern, Switzerland):
Visual Art and Eye Movements

R. Kliegl (University of Potsdam, Germany):
Distributed processing across reading fixations

K. Koga (Nagoya University, Japan) & M.F. Land (University of Sussex, UK):
Non-transactional recording and research technique of eye movements

P. Majaranta & K.J. Räihä (University Tampere, Finland):
Communication by gaze interaction - in search of new solutions

Marino Menozzi (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zürich, Switzerland):
Eye movements in fitting the task to man

R. Mueri (University of Bern, Switzerland):
Clinical studies of perceptual and oculomotor dysfunctions

R. Radach (Florida State University, USA):
Eye movements in reading: individual differences

W. H. Zangemeister (University of Hamburg, Germany) & S.R. Ellis (NASA Ames Research Center, USA):
Lawrence Stark revisited: The control of eye movements and the Noton & Stark scanpath theory

J.L. Semmlow (Rutgers University, USA) & W. H. Zangemeister (University of Hamburg, Germany):
L.Stark's Dry Dissection, Reading-Path, Saccadic Scene Analysis & Problem Solving

 

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