Papers

See: http://scholar.google.ca/citations?user=odIH0aoAAAAJ&hl=en

in press

Lu, Z. & van Zoest, W. (in press). Combining social cues in attention: Looking at gaze- head- and pointing-cues. Attention, Perception & Psychophysics.

2022

Bonmassar, C., Pavani, F., Spinella, D., Frau, G. N. & van Zoest, W. (2022) Does age-related hearing loss deteriorate attentional resources? Aging, Neuropsychology and Cognition. 1-19.

van Heusden, E., van Zoest, W., Donk, m. & Olivers, CNL (2022). An attentional limbo: saccades become momentarily non-selective in between saliency-driven and relevance-driven selection. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review. 1-11.

Kochs, S., Pimpini, L., van Zoest, W., Jansen, A., & Roefs, (2022).Effects of mindset and dietary restraint on attention bias for food and food Intake. Journal of Cognition. 5(1)

Pimpini, L., Kochs, S., van Zoest, W., Jansen, A., & Roefs, A. (2022). Food Captures Attention, but Not the Eyes: An Eye-Tracking Study on Mindset and BMI’s Impact on Attentional Capture by High-Caloric Visual Food Stimuli. Journal of Cognition, 5(1).

2021

Hickey, C., & van Zoest, W. (2021). Foxes, hedgehogs, and attentional capture. Visual Cognition, 29(9), 596-599.

van Zoest, W., Huber-Huber, C., Weaver, M., & Hickey, C. (2021). Neural mechanisms of strategic and proactive distractor inhibition in visual attention. Journal of Neuroscience. 41 (33), 7120-7135

Heinke, D., Wachman, P., van Zoest, W., & Leek, E.C. (2021) Failure to learn object shape geometry: Implications for convolutional neural networks as plausible models of biological vision. Vision Research. 189, 81-92

Bonmassar, D., Pavani, F. Di Renzo, A., Caselli, M. C. & van Zoest, W. (2021). Eye movement patterns to social and non-social cues in early deaf adults. Quarterly journal of Psychology. 74.6: 1021-1036.

Deakin, J. T., Porat, L., van Zoest, W., & Heinke, D. (2021). Behavioral Research, Overt Performance. Chapter for the Encyclopaedia of Behavioural Neuroscience 2e. In Reference Module in Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Psychology. Elsevier.

2019

Bonmassar, C., Pavani, F. & van Zoest, W. (2019) The role of eye movements in manual responses to social and non-social cues. Attention, Perception & Psychophysics. 81 (5), 1236-1252

Pavani, F., Venturini, M., Baruffaldi, F., Caselli, M.C., & van Zoest, W. (2019). Environmental learning of social cues: evidence from enhanced eye-gaze cueing in deaf children. Child Development, 90 (5), 1525-1534

Notaro, G., van Zoest, W., Altman, M., Melcher, D., & Hasson, U. (2019) Predictions as a window into learning: anticipatory fixation offsets carry more information about environmental statistics than stimulus-responses. Journal of Vision,19, 8. doi:10.1167/19.2.8

Paoletti, D., Braun, C., Vargo, E. J., & van Zoest, W. (2019). Spontaneous pre‐stimulus oscillatory activity shapes the way we look: A concurrent imaging and eye‐movement study. European Journal of Neuroscience, 49, 137– 149

Donofry, S. D., van Zoest, W., Moonen, A., Sacchetti, S., Nederkoorn, C., & Roefs, A. (2019). Effect of dietary restraint and mood state on attentional processing of food cues. Journal of behavior therapy and experimental psychiatry, 62, 117-124.

2018

Saunders, D. R., Melcher, D. & van Zoest, W. (2018). No evidence of task co-representation in a joint Stroop task. Psychological Research. 83(5), 852-862.

2017

van Zoest, W., Van der Stigchel, S. & Donk, M. (2017). Conditional control in visual selection. Attention, Perception & Psychophysics, 79 (6), 1555-1572

Weaver, MD, Hickey, C. & van Zoest, W. (2017). The impact of salience and visual working memory on the monitoring and control of saccadic behaviour: An eye-tracking and EEG study. Psychophysiology, 54(4) - 544- 544

Weaver, MD, van Zoest, W. & Hickey, C. (2017). A temporal dependency account of attentional inhibition in oculomotor control. Neuroimage. 147:880-894.

Pavani, F., Venturini, M., Baruffaldi, F., Artesini, L., Bonfioli, F., Frau, G.N. & van Zoest, W. (2017). Spatial and non-spatial multisensory cueing in unilateral cochlear implant users. Hearing Research. 344, 24-37

van Zoest, W., Heimler, B. & Pavani, F. (2017). The oculomotor salience of flicker, apparent motion and continuous motion in saccade trajectories. Experimental Brain Research, 235(1), 181-191

2016

Stein, T., Siebold, A. & van Zoest, W. (2016). Testing the idea of privileged awareness of self-relevant information. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance. 42 (3), 303-307

2015

Siebold, A., Weaver, M.D., Donk, M. & van Zoest, W. (2015). Social saliency does not transfer to oculomotor visual search. Visual Cognition. 23(8), 989-1019

Paoletti, D., Weaver, M. D., Braun, C. & van Zoest, W. (2015). Trading off stimulus salience for identity: a cueing approach to disentangle visual selection strategies. Vision Research,113,116-24 pdf

van Zoest, W. & Kerzel, D. (2015). The effects of saliency on manual reach trajectories and reach target selection. Vision Research. Vision Research,113,179–187 pdf

Reeder, R., van Zoest, W. & Peelen, M. (2015). Involuntary attentional capture by task-irrelevant objects that match the search template for category detection in natural scenes. Attention, Perception & Psychophysics, 77(4):1070-80

Heimler, B., van Zoest, W., Baruffaldi, F., Rinaldi, P., Caselli, M. C. & Pavani, F. (2015). Attentional orienting to social and non-social cues in early deaf adults. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 41 (6), 1758-1771 . pdf

Heimler, B, van Zoest, W., Baruffaldi, F., Donk, M. Rinaldi, P., Caselli, M. C. & Pavani, F. (2015). Finding the balance between capture and control: oculomotor selection in early deaf adults. Brain & Cognition, 96:12-27 pdf

2014

Heimler, B., Pavani, F., Donk, M. & van Zoest, W. (2014) . Stimulus- and goal-driven control of eye movements: Action video game players are faster but not better. Attention, Perception & Psychophysics. 76(8):2398-412 pdf

Weaver, M.D., Paoletti, D., & van Zoest, W. (2014). The impact of predictive cues and visual working memory on dynamic oculomotor selection. Journal of Vision, 14(3): 27; doi:10.1167/14.3.27 pdf

2013

Siebold, A., van Zoest, W., Meeter, M., & Donk, M. (2013). In defense of the salience map: salience rather than visibility determines selection. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 39(6), 1516-24

Hickey, C., & van Zoest, W. (2013). Reward-associated stimuli capture the eyes in spite of strategic attentional set. Vision Research. 92, (2013), p. 67-74

van Zoest, W. (2013). The influence of a salient distractor in object-substitution masking. Visual Cognition. 21(3), 399-414 pdf

Ohlsen, G, van Zoest, W. & Van Vugt, M. (2013). Gender and facial dominance in gaze cuing: Emotional context matters in whose eyes we follow. PLoS ONE 8(4): e59471. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0059471 pdf

2012

van Zoest, W., Donk, M. & Van der Stigchel, S. (2012). Stimulus-salience and the time-course of saccade trajectory deviations. Journal of Vision. 12 (8): 16, 1–13 pdf

Hickey, C., & van Zoest, W. (2012). Reward creates oculomotor salience. Current Biology. 22(7), R219-R220 pdf

van Zoest, W., Kingstone, A. & Theeuwes, J. (2012). The time-course of identity-based SR-compatibility in visual search. Acta Psychologica.140 (2012) 101–109 pdf

2011

Donk, M. & van Zoest, W. (2011). No control in orientation search: The effects of instruction on oculomotor selection in visual search. Vision Research, 51 (19), 2156-2166

Siebold, A., van Zoest, W. & Donk, M. (2011). Oculomotor evidence for top-down control following the initial saccade. PLoS ONE, 6(9): e23552

van Zoest, W., & Hunt, A. R. (2011). Saccadic eye movements and perceptual judgments reveal a shared visual representation that is increasingly accurate over time. Vision Research, 51(1), 111-119 pdf

2010

van Zoest, W. & Donk, M. (2010). Awareness of the saccade goal in oculomotor selection: Your eyes go before you know. Consciousness and Cognition, 19(4), 861-871 pdf

van Zoest, W., Hunt, A. R. & Kingstone, A. (2010). Visual representations in cognition: It's about time. Current Directions in Psychological Science. 19(2), 116-120. pdf

Hickey, C., van Zoest, W. & Theeuwes, J. (2010). The time course of exogenous and endogenous control of covert attention. Experimental Brain Research. 201(4), 789-9

Hunt, A. R., van Zoest, W. & Kingstone, A. (2010). Attending to emerging representations: The importance of task context and time of response. In A.C. Nobre & J. Coull (Eds.). Attention and Time. Oxford University Press. pdf

Mortier, K, van Zoest, W., Meeter, M. & Theeuwes, J. (2010). Word cues affect detection but not localization responses. Attention, Perception & Psychophysics. 72(1):65-7

2008

Van der Stigchel, S., van Zoest, W., Theeuwes, J. & Barton, J. J. S. (2008). The influence of ‘blind’ distractors on eye movement trajectories in hemianopic vision. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience. 20(11), 2025-2036

van Zoest, W. & Donk, M. (2008). Goal-driven modulation as a function of time in saccadic target selection. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 61(10), 1553-1572. pdf

Donk, M. & van Zoest, W. (2008). Effects of salience are short-lived. Psychological Science, 19 (7), 733-739. pdf

van Zoest, W., Van der Stigchel, S., & Barton, J. J. S. (2008). Distractor effects on saccade trajectories: A comparison of prosaccades, antisaccades, and memory-guided saccades. Experimental Brain Research. 186 (3), 431- 424. pdf

Mulckhuyse, M., van Zoest, W. & Theeuwes, J. (2008). Capture of the eyes by relevant and irrelevant onsets. Experimental Brain Research. 186 (2), 225- 235.

2007

van Zoest, W., Lleras, A., Kingstone, A., & Enns, J. T., (2007). In sight, out of mind: The role of eye movements in the rapid resumption of visual search. Perception & Psychophysics, 69 (7), 1204- 1217. pdf

2006

van Zoest, W., Giesbrecht, B., Enns, J. T., & Kingstone, A. (2006). New reflections on visual search: Inter-item symmetry matters! Psychological Science, 17(6), 535- 542. pdf

van Zoest, W., & Donk, M. (2006). Saccadic target selection as a function of time. Spatial Vision. 19 (1), 61- 67. pdf

2005

van Zoest, W. & Donk, M. (2005). The effects of salience on saccadic target selection. Visual Cognition, 2 (2), 353- 375. pdf

2004

van Zoest, W., Donk, M. & Theeuwes, J. (2004). The role of stimulus-driven and goal-driven control in saccadic visual selection. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 30 (4), 746- 759. pdf

van Zoest, W. & Donk, M. (2004). Bottom-up and top-down control in visual search. Perception. 33, 927- 937. pdf