Publications
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Reconfiguring visual studies and visual competencies University of Antwerp
Visual culture and visual studies KU Leuven
Illustrating Shakespeare's 'Ophelia': selected studies in visual poetics, paratexts, and print culture, 1743-1815 Ghent University
The Place of the Visual Arts within the Broad Spectrum of Performance Studies Vrije Universiteit Brussel
This article argues the lingering misconception about the visual arts experience in the early days of environmental theatre.
Contemplating ‘visual studies’ as an emerging transdisciplinary endeavour University of Antwerp
Using Visual Analysis to Evaluate and Refine Multilevel Models of Single-Case Studies KU Leuven
© 2014, © Hammill Institute on Disabilities 2014. In special education, multilevel models of single-case research have been used as a method of estimating treatment effects over time and across individuals. Although multilevel models can accurately summarize the effect, it is known that if the model is misspecified, inferences about the effects can be biased. Concern with the potential for model misspecification motivates our method for ...
A Large Video Set of Natural Human Actions for Visual and Cognitive Neuroscience Studies and Its Validation with fMRI KU Leuven
The investigation of the perception of others' actions and underlying neural mechanisms has been hampered by the lack of a comprehensive stimulus set covering the human behavioral repertoire. To fill this void, we present a video set showing 100 human actions recorded in natural settings, covering the human repertoire except for emotion-driven (e.g., sexual) actions and those involving implements (e.g., tools). We validated the set using fMRI ...
Practice effects in large-scale visual word recognition studies : a lexical decision study on 14,000 Dutch mono- and disyllabic words and nonwords Ghent University
In recent years, psycholinguistics has seen a remarkable growth of research based on the analysis of data from large-scale studies of word recognition, in particular lexical decision and word naming. We present the data of the Dutch Lexicon Project (DLP) in which a group of 39 participants made lexical decisions to 14,000 words and the same number of nonwords. To examine whether the extensive practice precludes comparison with the traditional ...