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Deborah Apthorp
PeerJ Author
405 Points

Contributions by role

Author 405

Contributions by subject area

Neuroscience
Psychiatry and Psychology
Kinesiology

Deborah Apthorp

PeerJ Author

Summary

Dr. Apthorp is a cognitive neuroscientist specialising in the human visual system and its interactions with other sensory systems, and also how changes in these systems might serve as non-invasive ways to track disease progression in diseases like Parkinson’s disease and MS. She is also currently collaborating with machine learning experts to develop new and exciting ways to analyse multimodal longitudinal data in these studies.

Neuroscience Psychiatry & Psychology

Past or current institution affiliations

Australian National University
University of New England

Work details

Associate Professor

University of New England
School of Psychology

Adjunct Associate Professor

Australian National University
January 2018
Research School of Computer Science

Websites

  • Google Scholar
  • Personal website

PeerJ Contributions

  • Articles 3
  • Feedback 1
  • Answers 1
May 16, 2023
Autistic traits are associated with individual differences in finger tapping: an online study
Alycia Messing, Deborah Apthorp
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.15406 PubMed 37214091
May 4, 2020
The impact of sleep loss on sustained and transient attention: an EEG study
Lucienne Shenfield, Vanessa Beanland, Ashleigh Filtness, Deborah Apthorp
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.8960 PubMed 32411513
March 5, 2020
Temporal predictability does not impact attentional blink performance: effects of fixed vs. random inter-trial intervals
Lucienne Shenfield, Vanessa Beanland, Deborah Apthorp
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.8677 PubMed 32185105

Provided feedback on

1 vote
01 Dec 2015

Does sadness impair color perception? Thorstenson et al.’s plan to find out is flawed

Nice work, guys! I also raised the point about chromatic adaptation from the film clip when we discussed this in a recent workshop. The distributions of data from Experiment 2 are...

1 Answer

0
Could I somehow have access to the RSVP tool you use?