Amanote Research
Register
Sign In
Discover open access scientific publications
Search, annotate, share and cite publications
Publications by Tomohisa ASAI
The Relationship Between Schizotypal Personality and the Integration of Audio-Visual Information: A Dynamic-Ventriloquism Task Study
The Japanese Journal of Cognitive Psychology
Related publications
A Study on the Relationship Between Task, Information, and Individual Performance
Technology in Society
Sociology
Business
Human Factors
International Management
Ergonomics
Political Science
Education
Accumulation and Decay of Visual Capture and the Ventriloquism Aftereffect Caused by Brief Audio-Visual Disparities
Experimental Brain Research
Neuroscience
Audio–visual Integration Through the Parallel Visual Pathways
Brain Research
Neuroscience
Neurology
Developmental Biology
Molecular Biology
A Study of the Relationship Between Personality Traits and Music Preference
International Journal of Multidisciplinary and Current Research
The Development of Audio-Visual Integration for Temporal Judgements
PLoS Computational Biology
Molecular Neuroscience
Evolution
Ecology
Genetics
Behavior
Molecular Biology
Systematics
Simulation
Cellular
Computational Theory
Mathematics
Modeling
A Study on the Relationship Between Personality Traits and Preference of Sporst.
Taiikugaku kenkyu (Japan Journal of Physical Education, Health and Sport Sciences)
Personality, Motivation, and Performance: A Theory of the Relationship Between Individual Differences and Information Processing.
Psychological Review
Philosophy of Science
Psychology
History
The Impact of Task Load on the Integration of Explicit Contextual Priors and Visual Information During Anticipation
Psychophysiology
Developmental
Cognitive Psychology
Neuropsychology
Educational Psychology
Cognitive Neuroscience
Endocrine
Developmental Neuroscience
Physiological Psychology
Autonomic Systems
Neurology
Neuroscience
Biological Psychiatry
Physiology
Experimental
Relationship Between Criterion Task Set Performance and the Personality Variables of Sensation Seeking and Stimulus Screening
Proceedings of the Human Factors Society Annual Meeting