Contact:

Phone:510-642-3134
Email:

Education:

B.A. (2001) Psychology and Philosophy, Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
M.A. (2004) Clinical Neuropsychology, Hebrew University.
Ph.D. (Expected 2009) Cognition Brain and Behavior, Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley.

Research interests:

I am investigating how different types of attention might bear different consequences on perceptual processing. Using EEG and fMRI to describe the neural circuitry serving different types of attention, I hope to inform the way we think about visual spatial attention at the mechanisms level.

Publications:

A.N. Landau, M. Esterman, S. Bentin, L.C. Robertson, W. Prinzmetal (in press) Different Effects of Voluntary and Involuntary Attention on EEG activity in the Gamma Band. Journal of Neuroscience.

A.N. Landau and S. Bentin (in press). Faces and objects engage attention independently: A doubly-dissociated attentional blink. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Percpetion and Performance.

W. Prinzmetal and A.N. Landau (in press) Dissecting Spatial Visual Attention. In V. Coltheart (Ed.). Tutorials in Visual Cognition. Hove, UK, Psychology Press.

A. List, J.L. Brooks, M. Esterman, A. Flevaris, A.N. Landau, G. Bowman, V. Stanton, T. Van Vleet, L.C. Robertson, K.L.P. Schendel (in press). Neglect, Twice-Asessed. Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society.

M. Esterman, W. Prinzmetal, J. DeGutis, A. Landau, E. Hazeltine, T. Verstynen, L. Robertson (submitted). Different behavior and neural consequences of voluntary and involuntary spatial attention to faces.

H. Aviezer, A. N. Landau , L.C. Robertson, M.A. Peterson, N. Soroker, Y. Sacher, Y. Bonneh, S. Bentin(2007). Implicit inegration in a case of integrative visual agnosia. Neuropsychologia 45(9): 2066-2077.

A. List, A. Landau (2006) Attention and Intention, Decoded! Journal of Neuroscience 26(26): 6907-6908