Publications:

(Please also check the homepages of the group members for PDFs and publication updates)

  • Y.-X. Ho, S. Serwe, J. Trommershäuser, L. T. Maloney, and M. S. Landy. (2009). The role of visuo-haptic experience in visually perceived depth. Journal of Neurophysiology, in press.
  • S. Serwe, K. Drewing, and J. Trommershäuser. (2009). Combination of noisy directional visual and proprioceptive information during visually-guided pointing. Journal of Vision, in press.
  • J. Trommershäuser. (2009). Acquisition of knowledge about uncertainty in the outcome of sensory motor decision tasks. IEEE 8th International Conference on Development and Learning (ICDL 2009), accepted .
  • J. Trommershäuser (2009). Biases and Optimality of Sensory-Motor and Cognitive Decisions. In: M. Raab, J. G. Johnson, V. Gallese (Eds.) Mind and Motion. Progress in Brain Research, 174 269-280.
  • J. Trommershäuser, L. T. Maloney, and M. S. Landy. (2008). Decision Making, Movement Planning and Statistical Decision Theory. Trends in Cognitive Sciences,12, 291-297.
  • A. Seydell, B. C. McCann, J. Trommershäuser, and D. C. Knill. (2008). Learning Stochastic Reward Distributions in a Speeded Pointing Task. Journal of Neuroscience, 28, 4356-4367.
  • B. J. White, M. Stritzke, and K. R. Gegenfurtner. (2008). Saccadic facilitation in natural backgrounds. Current Biology, 18, 124-128.
  • S. Gepshtein, A. Seydell, and J. Trommershäuser. (2007). Optimality of human movement under natural variations of visual-motor uncertainty. Journal of Vision, 7:5, 1-18. (available online, PDF, supplement)
  • M. Stritzke, and J. Trommershäuser. (2007). Eye movements during movement under risk. Vision Research, 47, 2000-2009. (PDF)
  • M. S. Landy, R. Goutcher, J. Trommershäuser, P. Mamassian. (2007). Visual Estimation Under Risk. Journal of Vision, 7:4, 1-15. (available online, PDF, Supplement)
  • J. Trommershäuser, J. Mattis, L. T. Maloney, and M. S. Landy. (2006). Limits to human movement planning with delayed and unpredictable onset of needed information. Exp. Brain Res., 175, 276-284. (PDF)
  • J. Trommershäuser, M. S. Landy, and L. T. Maloney. (2006). Humans rapidly estimate expected gain in movement planning. Psychological Science, 17, 981-988. (PDF)
  • S.-W. Wu, J. Trommershäuser, L. T. Maloney, and M. S. Landy. (2006). Limits to Human Movement Planning in Tasks with Asymmetric Value Landscapes. Journal of Vision, 5, 53-63. (available online, PDF)
  • J. Trommershäuser, S. Gepshtein, L. T. Maloney, M. S. Landy, and M. S. Banks. (2005). Optimal compensation for changes in task-relevant movement variability. Journal of Neuroscience, 25, 7169-7178. (PDF, Supplement)
  • J. Diedrichsen, S. Werner, T. Schmidt, and J. Trommershäuser. (2004). Immediate spatial distortions of pointing movements induced by visual landmarks. Perception & Psychophysics, 66, 89-103. (PDF)
  • J. Trommershäuser, L. T. Maloney, and M. S. Landy. (2003). Consistency of bisection judgments in binocular space. Journal of Vision, 3, 795-807. (available online, PDF)
  • J. Trommershäuser, L. T. Maloney, and M. S. Landy. (2003). Statistical Decision Theory and the Selection of Rapid, Goal-Directed Movements. Journal of the Optical Society of America A, 20, 1419-1433. (PDF)
  • Featured in Virtual Journal of Biological Physics (2003), 6(2).
  • J. Trommershäuser, R. Schneggenburger, A. Zippelius, and E. Neher. (2003). Heterogeneous presynaptic release-probabilities: functional relevance for short-term plasticity. Biophysical Journal, 84, 1563-79. (PDF)
  • J. Trommershäuser, L. T. Maloney, and M. S. Landy. (2003). Statistical Decision Theory and Trade-offs in the Control of Motor Response. Spatial Vision, 16, 255-75. (PDF)
  • J. Trommershäuser and A. Zippelius. (2001). Biophysical model of a single synaptic connection: transmission properties are determined by the cooperation of pre- and postsynaptic mechanisms. Neurocomputing 38-40, 65-71. (PDF)
  • J. Trommershäuser, S.Titz, B. U. Keller, and A. Zippelius. (2001). Variability of Excitatory Currents due to Single Channel Noise, Receptor Number and Morphological Heterogeneity. J. Theor. Biol. 208, 329-343. (PDF)
  • J. Trommershäuser, J. Marienhagen, and A. Zippelius. (1999). Stochastic model of central synapses: slow diffusion of transmitter interacting with spatially distributed receptors and transporters. J. Theor. Biol. 198, 101-119. (PDF)

Book chapters & Commentaries:

  • A. Seydell, D. C. Knill, and J. Trommershäuser.(2009). Priors and learning in cue integration. In: J. Trommershäuser, M. S. Landy, and K. P. Körding (Eds.) Sensory Cue Integration. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
  • M. S. Landy, Y.-X. Ho, S. Serwe, J. Trommershäuser, and L. T. Maloney. (2009). Cues and Pseudocues in Texture and Shape Perception. In: J. Trommershäuser, M. S. Landy, and K. P. Körding (Eds.) Sensory Cue Integration. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
  • J. Trommershäuser, M. S. Landy, and L. T. Maloney. (2008). The Expected Utility of Movement. In: P. W. Glimcher, C. F. Camerer, E. Fehr & R. A. Poldrack (Eds.), Neuroeconomics: Decision Making and the Brain. London, UK: Elsevier
  • C. Keysers, R. Boyd, J. Cohen, M. Donald, W. Güth, E. Johnson, R. Kurzban, L. Schooler, J. Schooler, E. Spelke, J. Trommershäuser. (2008). Explicit and Implicit Strategies in Decision Making. In: C. Engel, W. Singer (Eds.) Better than Conscious: Exploiting the Capacity of Humans to Reach Decisions by Both Serial and Parallel Processing of Information. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press
  • D. C. Knill, L. T. Maloney, and J. Trommershäuser. (2007). Special Issue Introduction. Sensorimotor Processing and Goal-Directed Movement. Journal of Vision, 7, 1-2. (available online, PDF)
  • L. T. Maloney, J. Trommershäuser, and M. S. Landy. (2007). Questions without Words: A Comparison between Decision Making under Risk and Movement Planning under Risk. To appear in: Integrated Models of Cognitive Systems. Gray, W. (Ed.) New York: Oxford University Press. (pp. 297-315) (PDF)

Books:

  • J. Trommershäuser, K. P. Körding, and M. S. Landy. (2009). Sensory Cue Integration. New York, NY: Oxford University Press, in preparation