AbstractHumans spontaneously generate eyeblinks every few seconds. However, because this blink rate is several times more common than is required for ocular lubrication, the function of most spontaneous eyeblinks remains unknown. Because spontaneous eyeblinks tend to occur at implicit breakpoints in video stories, I hypothesized that spontaneous eyeblinks play an active role in attentional disengagement from external stimuli. Consistent with this, we previously found that spontaneous eyeblinks involve the concurrent deactivation of the dorsal attention network and activation of the default mode network when individuals are viewing videos. However, this previous study examined only the upper brain regions to increase the temporal resolution ...
When people monitor a visual stream of rapidly presented stimuli for two targets (T1 and T2), they o...
AbstractAttending to a visual event can lead to functional blindness for other events in the visual ...
Facial movements have the potential to be powerful social signals. Previous studies have shown that ...
AbstractHumans spontaneously generate eyeblinks every few seconds. However, because this blink rate ...
SummaryBlinks profoundly interrupt visual input but are rarely noticed, perhaps because of blink sup...
Spontaneous blinking occurs 15–20 times per minute. Although blinking has often been associated with...
Spontaneous blinking is a non-invasive indicator known to reflect dopaminergic influence over fronta...
Spontaneous eye-blinks occur much more often than it would be necessary to maintain the tear film on...
We blink more often than required for maintaining the corneal tear film. Whether there are perceptua...
The timing and frequency of spontaneous eyeblinking is thought to be influenced by ongoing internal ...
We blink our eyes more often than necessary to keep our cornea adequately lubricated. Blink rates ar...
An eyeblink has a clear effect on low-level information processing because it temporarily occludes a...
When people monitor a visual stream of rapidly presented stimuli for two targets (T1 and T2), they o...
International audienceWe are usually unaware of the brief but large illumination changes caused by b...
When people monitor a visual stream of rapidly presented stimuli for two targets (T1 and T2), they o...
When people monitor a visual stream of rapidly presented stimuli for two targets (T1 and T2), they o...
AbstractAttending to a visual event can lead to functional blindness for other events in the visual ...
Facial movements have the potential to be powerful social signals. Previous studies have shown that ...
AbstractHumans spontaneously generate eyeblinks every few seconds. However, because this blink rate ...
SummaryBlinks profoundly interrupt visual input but are rarely noticed, perhaps because of blink sup...
Spontaneous blinking occurs 15–20 times per minute. Although blinking has often been associated with...
Spontaneous blinking is a non-invasive indicator known to reflect dopaminergic influence over fronta...
Spontaneous eye-blinks occur much more often than it would be necessary to maintain the tear film on...
We blink more often than required for maintaining the corneal tear film. Whether there are perceptua...
The timing and frequency of spontaneous eyeblinking is thought to be influenced by ongoing internal ...
We blink our eyes more often than necessary to keep our cornea adequately lubricated. Blink rates ar...
An eyeblink has a clear effect on low-level information processing because it temporarily occludes a...
When people monitor a visual stream of rapidly presented stimuli for two targets (T1 and T2), they o...
International audienceWe are usually unaware of the brief but large illumination changes caused by b...
When people monitor a visual stream of rapidly presented stimuli for two targets (T1 and T2), they o...
When people monitor a visual stream of rapidly presented stimuli for two targets (T1 and T2), they o...
AbstractAttending to a visual event can lead to functional blindness for other events in the visual ...
Facial movements have the potential to be powerful social signals. Previous studies have shown that ...