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Michael E R Nicholls

Explore the profile of Michael E R Nicholls including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles. Areas
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Recent Articles
1.
Hutchinson B, Wilkinson N, Robertson G, Budd A, Nicholls M, Griffiths O
J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform . 2023 Aug; 49(10):1310-1329. PMID: 37561527
Inattentional blindness (IB) occurs when a salient object presented in plain sight goes unnoticed when its appearance is unexpected. Across two experiments, participants completed a classic dynamic IB task while...
2.
Aniulis E, Nicholls M, Thomas N, Sharp G
Body Image . 2022 Feb; 40:351-357. PMID: 35144073
Women tend to overestimate their body size, including space needed to pass through gaps/apertures. These results were generated using static apertures resembling doorways. However, body image is influenced by other...
3.
Ciricugno A, Bartlett M, Gwinn O, Carragher D, Nicholls M
Laterality . 2021 Apr; 26(6):706-724. PMID: 33906579
Healthy individuals typically show a leftward attentional bias in the allocation of spatial attention along the horizontal plane, a phenomenon known as pseudoneglect, which relies on a right hemispheric dominance...
4.
Carragher D, Thomas N, Nicholls M
Br J Psychol . 2021 Mar; 112(4):902-933. PMID: 33742452
The cheerleader effect occurs when the same face is rated to be more attractive when it is seen in a group compared to when seen alone. We investigated whether this...
5.
Nicholls M
Laterality . 2021 Feb; 26(3):327-329. PMID: 33634730
Sebastian Ocklenburg and colleagues have written an important and exciting summary of where laterality research might go. Perhaps reiterating some of their points, it seems important to understand the nuances...
6.
Griffiths O, Gwinn O, Russo S, Baetu I, Nicholls M
Biol Psychol . 2020 Dec; 158:108004. PMID: 33290847
Efficient learning requires allocating limited attentional resources to meaningful stimuli and away from irrelevant stimuli. This prioritization may occur via covert attention, evident in the activity of the visual cortex....
7.
Saccone E, Thomas N, Nicholls M
J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform . 2020 Oct; 47(4):529-544. PMID: 33119338
The motor interference hypothesis posits that performing a secondary motor task with a task relevant effector (e.g., the hand) impairs performance on a primary object-naming task wherein objects are used...
8.
Cropper S, McCauley A, Gwinn O, Bartlett M, Nicholls M
J Vis . 2020 Oct; 20(10):11. PMID: 33027510
The brain is a slave to sense; we see and hear things that are not there and engage in ongoing correction of these illusory experiences, commonly termed pareidolia. The current...
9.
Bartlett M, Gwinn O, Thomas N, Nicholls M
Brain Cogn . 2020 Feb; 140:105547. PMID: 32065991
Neurologically healthy individuals exhibit subtle attentional asymmetries, such that attention is preferentially directed leftwards for objects in near space and rightwards for objects in far space. These attentional biases also...
10.
Thomas N, Gwinn O, Bartlett M, Nicholls M
J Cogn . 2020 Feb; 3(1):4. PMID: 32064455
Pseudoneglect causes neurologically intact individuals to bias their attention to the left in near space, and to the right in far space. These attentional asymmetries impact both ambulatory and non-ambulatory...