Eren Gunseli

Eren Gunseli
Sabanci University · Department of Psychology

PhD

About

29
Publications
5,086
Reads
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463
Citations
Citations since 2017
17 Research Items
410 Citations
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2017201820192020202120222023020406080
2017201820192020202120222023020406080
2017201820192020202120222023020406080
Additional affiliations
October 2015 - present
University of Chicago
Position
  • PostDoc Position
September 2011 - August 2015
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Position
  • PhD Student
August 2009 - August 2011
Bogazici University
Position
  • Laboratory Manager
Education
September 2011 - August 2015
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Field of study
  • Cognitive Psychology
September 2008 - August 2011
Bogazici University
Field of study
  • Cognitive Psychology
September 2004 - June 2008
Bogazici University
Field of study
  • Physics

Publications

Publications (29)
Article
Although many of our perceptual biases stem from long-term, repeated exposure, current theories of visual search assume a central role for visual working memory (VWM) in guiding attention to target information. Crucially, whether a VWM representation guides attention depends on the relative priority that the memory has within VWM. Here, in a combin...
Article
Full-text available
Cueing a remembered item during the delay of a visual memory task leads to enhanced recall of the cued item compared to when an item is not cued. This cueing benefit has been proposed to reflect attention within visual memory being shifted from a distributed mode to a focused mode, thus protecting the cued item against perceptual interference. Here...
Article
Full-text available
Retrospectively cueing an item retained in visual working memory during maintenance is known to improve its retention. However, studies have provided conflicting results regarding the costs of such retro-cues for the noncued items, leading to different theories on the mechanisms behind visual working memory maintenance and retro-cueing. Here we tes...
Article
Full-text available
Prominent theories of attention claim that visual search is guided through attentional templates stored in working memory. Recently, the contralateral delay activity (CDA), an electrophysiological index of working memory storage, has been found to rapidly decrease when participants repeatedly search for the same target, suggesting that, with learni...
Article
Full-text available
Recent research has suggested that humans can assert control over the precision of working memory (WM) items. However, the mechanisms that enable this control are unclear. While some studies suggest that internal attention improves precision, it may not be the only factor, as previous work also demonstrated that WM storage is disentangled from atte...
Preprint
Full-text available
Representations in working memory need to be flexibly transformed to adapt to our dynamic environment and variable task demands. Recent work has demonstrated that activity in the alpha frequency band enables precise decoding of visual information during both perception and sustained storage in working memory. Extant work, however, has focused exclu...
Article
Full-text available
Goal-directed attention is usually studied by providing individuals with explicit instructions on what they should attend to. But in daily life, we often use past experiences to guide our attentional states. Given the importance of memory for predicting upcoming events, we hypothesized that memory-guided attention is supported by neural preparation...
Article
Full-text available
Goal-directed attention is usually studied by providing individuals with explicit instructions on what they should attend to. But in daily life, we often use past experiences to guide our attentional states. Given the importance of memory for predicting upcoming events, we hypothesized that memory-guided attention is supported by neural preparation...
Article
Full-text available
Goal-directed attention is usually studied by providing individuals with explicit instructions on what they should attend to. But in daily life, we often use past experiences to guide our attentional states. Given the importance of memory for predicting upcoming events, we hypothesized that memory-guided attention is supported by neural preparation...
Article
Why do we sometimes easily retrieve memories, but other times appear to forget them? We often look to our external environment for retrieval cues, but another way to optimize memory retrieval is to be in a mental state, or mode, that prioritizes access to our internal representation of the world. Such a 'retrieval mode' was proposed by Endel Tulvin...
Preprint
Full-text available
Goal-directed attention is usually studied by providing individuals with explicit instructions on what they should attend to. But in daily life, we often use past experiences to guide our attentional states. Given the importance of memory for predicting upcoming events, we hypothesized that memory-guided attention is supported by neural preparation...
Article
Full-text available
Selective attention plays a prominent role in prioritizing information in working memory (WM), improving performance for attended representations. However, it remains unclear whether unattended WM representations suffer from information loss. Here we tested the hypothesis that within WM, selectively attending to an item and stopping storing other i...
Preprint
Why do we sometimes easily retrieve memories, but other times appear to forget them? We often look to our external environment for retrieval cues, but another way to optimize memory retrieval is to be in a mental state, or mode, that prioritizes access to our internal representation of the world. Such a ‘retrieval mode’ was proposed by Endel Tulvin...
Article
Full-text available
Complex cognition relies on both on-line representations in working memory (WM), said to reside in the focus of attention, and passive off-line representations of related information. Here, we dissected the focus of attention by showing that distinct neural signals index the on-line storage of objects and sustained spatial attention. We recorded el...
Preprint
Full-text available
Working memory (WM) maintains relevant information in an accessible state, and is composed of an active focus of attention and passive offline storage. Here, we dissect the focus of attention by showing that distinct neural signals index the online storage of objects and sustained spatial attention. We recorded EEG activity during two tasks that em...
Preprint
Full-text available
Selective attention plays a prominent role in prioritizing information in working memory (WM), improving performance for attended representations. However, it remains unclear what the consequences of selection are for the maintenance of unattended WM representations, and whether this results in information loss. Here we tested the hypothesis that w...
Poster
Full-text available
The Contralateral Delay Activity (CDA) is a popular neural measure used to track storage in visual Working Memory (WM). The amplitude of the CDA increases with the number of memoranda, asymptotes around 3 items, and is sensitive to individual differences in behavior. However, there is still debate about whether the CDA reflects WM contents or susta...
Article
Attention during visual search is thought to be guided by an active visual working memory (VWM) representation of the search target. We tested the hypothesis that a VWM representation used for searching a target among competing information (a “search template”) is distinct from VWM representations used for simple recognition tasks, without competit...
Conference Paper
Working memory (WM) involves the active maintenance of information necessary for ongoing tasks, such that task-relevant changes in the environment trigger the dynamic updating of representations within WM. Long-term memory is strongly affected by context (i.e., aspects of the environment that are not directly task-relevant), but how is WM impacted...
Conference Paper
Attention during visual search is thought to be guided by an active visual working memory (VWM) representation of the search target. However, it is unclear if and how neural mechanisms that support VWM dissociate between different levels of anticipated search difficulty. We tested the hypothesis that posterior alpha band (8–14 Hz) oscillatory dynam...
Conference Paper
Retrospectively cueing an item retained in visual working memory during maintenance is known to improve its retention. However, literature has provided conflicting results regarding the costs of such retro-cues for non-cued items, which has led to a variety of theories on the role of cueing in visual working memory. We hypothesized that the differe...
Conference Paper
Prominent theories of attention claim that visual search is guided through attentional templates stored in working memory. Recently, the contralateral delay activity (CDA), an electrophysiological index of working memory storage, has been found to rapidly diminish when observers repeatedly search for the same target, suggesting that, with learning,...

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