PD Dr. Gyula Kovács


Universität Regensburg
Institut für Experimentelle Psychologie
Universitätsstr. 31, 93053 Regensburg
Deutschland

Zimmer: PT 4.0.56
Telefon: 0941-943-3852
Email: Gyula.Kovacs@psychologie.uni-regensburg.de
Sprechstunde: nach Vereinbarung
 
Forschungsinteressen
  • visuel cognition
  • kategorization
  • form perception
  • multisensoric integration
Publikationen
  • Carbon, C. C., Strobach, T. Langton, S., Harsányi, G., Leder, H., & Kovacs, G.: Adaptation effects of highly familiar faces: immediate and long lasting. Memory & Cognition (in press)
  • István Kóbor, László Füredi, Gyula Kovács, Charles Spence & Zoltán Vidnyánszky:
    Back-to-front: Improved tactile discrimination performance in the space you can't see.
    (Neurosci Lett. 2006 Mar 2; [Epub ahead of print])
  • Kovács G, Zimmer M, Harza I, Antal A, Vidnyanszky Z.:
    Position-specificity of facial adaptation.
    Neuroreport. 2005 Nov 28;16(17):1945-1949.
  • Kovács G, Zimmer M, Banko E, Harza I, Antal A, Vidnyanszky Z.:
    Electrophysiological Correlates of Visual Adaptation to Faces and Body Parts in Humans.
    Cereb Cortex. 2005 Aug 24; [Epub ahead of print]
  • T. Tompa, G. Sáry, Z. Chadaide, K. Köteles, G. Kovács, G. Benedek:
    Achromatic shape processing in the inferotemporal cortex of the macaque.
    (2004) Neuroreport 16: 57-61
  • A. Antal, E. T. Varga, Michael A. Nitsche, Z Chadaide, Walter Paulus, G. Kovács, Z. Vidnyánszky:
    Modulation of motion aftereffect by transcranial direct current stimulation over MT+/V5 in humans.
    Neuroreport. 2004 Nov 15;15(16):2491-2494.
  • G. M Sary, Z Chadaide, Dr.; T Tompa; G. Kovács, PhD; K Koteles; K Boda, Dr.; L Raduly, Dr.; G. Benedek:
    Relationship between stimulus complexity and neuronal activity in the inferotemporal cortex of the macaque monkey.
    Cognitive Brain Res (2004) 22: 1-12
  • G. Kovács, B Gulyás, I Savic, D I. Perrett, R. E Cornwell, A C. Little, B C. Jones, D. M Burt, V Gál and Z. Vidnyánszky:
    Smelling human sex hormone-like compounds affects face gender judgment of men.
    Neuroreport (2004) 15:1275-1277