
Publications of Katja M. Mayer
All genres
Journal Article (11)
2020
Journal Article
8, 89 (2020)
How can we learn foreign language vocabulary more easily? Frontiers for Young Minds 2017
Journal Article
38 (9), pp. 4398 - 4412 (2017)
Recently learned foreign abstract and concrete nouns are represented in distinct cortical networks similar to the native language. Human Brain Mapping
Journal Article
59 (2), pp. 178 - 187 (2017)
Humans are detected more efficiently than machines in the context of natural scenes. Japanese Psychological Research 2015
Journal Article
10 (10), e0139618 (2015)
Do people "pop out"? PLoS One
Journal Article
25 (4), pp. 530 - 535 (2015)
Visual and motor cortices differentially support the translation of foreign language words. Current Biology 2014
Journal Article
219 (6), pp. 2159 - 2171 (2014)
TBSS and probabilistic tractography reveal white matter connections for attention to object features. Brain Structure & Function
Journal Article
147, pp. 2 - 9 (2014)
Duration perception in crossmodally-defined intervals. Acta Psychologica 2013
Journal Article
7, 193 (2013)
Automatic processing of unattended object features by functional connectivity. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 2012
Journal Article
60 (2), pp. 1063 - 1072 (2012)
The neural mechanisms of reliability weighted integration of shape information from vision and touch. NeuroImage
Journal Article
56, pp. 20 - 27 (2012)
The influence of unattended features on object processing depends on task demand. Vision Research 2008
Journal Article
127 (1), pp. 51 - 56 (2008)
Haptic search is more efficient when the stimulus can be interpreted as consisting of fewer items. Acta Psychologica Poster (2)
2018
Poster
Visual sensory cortices facilitate translation of auditory foreign language words. 11th Annual Forum of Neuroscience, Federation of European Neuroscience Societies (FENS), Berlin, Germany (2018)
2017
Poster
Superior temporal sulcus is causally involved in the translation of foreign language words learned using gestures. Erasmus Mundus Auditory Cognitive Neuroscience Exchange Symposium, Leipzig, Germany (2017)