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Mattingley, Professor Jason

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Professor Jason Mattingley
Name:
Professor Jason Mattingley
Position:
Deputy Head and Professor
Room:
417
Email:
Phone:
+61 7 3346 7935
Fax:
+61 7 3365 4466
Postal Address:

School of Psychology
McElwain Building
The University of Queensland
St Lucia 4072, QLD
Australia

Qualifications:

B.Sc. (Hons), M.Sc. (Clin. Neuro.), PhD, FASSA

Background:

I was appointed as Foundation Chair in Cognitive Neuroscience at The University of Queensland in January 2007. This is a joint appointment between the Queensland Brain Institute and the School of Psychology, the aim of which is to foster the development of research and teaching links between the disciplines of neuroscience and cognitive science.

Previously I was Director of the Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory within the School of Behavioural Science at the University of Melbourne (2000 - 2006). Prior to that I was a Senior Research Fellow at Monash University (1997 - 1999), and an NHMRC Neil Hamilton Fairley Post-Doctoral Fellow at the University of Cambridge, UK (1994-1997).

Professional Activities:

Editorial Board Memberships:


Brain & Cognition
Cognitive Neuroscience
Cortex
Neurocase
Neuropsychologia




Professional and Research Organisation Memberships:

Australian Academy of Science, National Committee for Brain and Mind
Academy of Social Sciences in Australia, Fellow
Australian Psychological Society (APS), Member
APS College of Clinical Neuropsychologists, Member
British Neuropsychological Society, Member
Cognitive Neuroscience Society, Member
Australian Neuroscience Society, Member
Society for Neuroscience, Member

Research Activities:

Mechanisms of selective attention are crucial to virtually all aspects of everyday behaviour and cognition. The aim of my research is to address two broad questions concerning the nature of human selective attention. First, how does the brain filter sensory stimuli so that only behaviourally relevant inputs are selected for further processing? Second, what are the consequences of such selective processing for conscious perception and action? I have addressed these questions from a number of perspectives: by studying individuals with acquired and developmental disorders of attention, such as spatial neglect and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD); by using functional brain imaging techniques such as fMRI, ERPs and near-infrared spectroscopy, to examine the neural correlates of attentional processes; and by applying transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to focally stimulate regions of the brain thought to be involved in attentional control. My research has important implications for a number of real-world endeavours, including the diagnosis and treatment of individuals with attention deficits due to brain disease; the design of more efficient systems for conveying information to human operators; and in helping to predict preference and choice in consumer behaviour.

Representative Publications:

Authored Books


1. Bradshaw, J.L. & Mattingley, J.B. (1995). Clinical Neuropsychology: Behavioral and Brain Science. San Diego: Academic Press.


Edited Books/Special Issues


1. Mattingley, J.B. & Ward, J., eds. (2005). Cognitive neuroscience perspectives on synaesthesia. Special Issue of the journal Cortex (also to appear as a book).


Refereed Journal Articles


1. Mattingley, J.B. & Badcock, D.R. (1991). The shift effect can be elicited with both foveal and peripheral masks. Vision Research, 40, 1251-1257.

2. Mattingley, J.B. & Bradshaw, J.L. (1991). Spatial Maps. Nature, 352, 673-674.

3. Bradshaw, J.L., Dennis, C., Phillips, J.G., Mattingley, J.B., Pierson, J., Andrewes, D., Chiu, E. & Bradshaw, J.A. (1992). Initiation and execution of movement sequences in those suffering from and at risk of developing Huntington's disease. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, 14, 179-192.

4. Mattingley, J.B., Bradshaw, J.L. & Phillips, J.G. (1992). Reappraising unilateral neglect. Australian Journal of Psychology, 44, 163-169.

5. Mattingley, J.B., Bradshaw, J.L. & Phillips, J.G. (1992). Impairments of movement initiation and execution in unilateral neglect: directional hypokinesia and bradykinesia. Brain, 115, 1849-1874.

6. Bradshaw, J.L., Waterfall, M.L., Phillips, J.G., Iansek, R., Mattingley, J.B. & Bradshaw, J.A. (1993). Re-orientation of attention in Parkinson's disease: an extension to the vibrotactile modality. Neuropsychologia, 31, 51-66.

7. Mattingley, J.B., Bradshaw, J.L., Phillips, J.G. & Bradshaw, J.A. (1993). Reversed perceptual asymmetry for faces in left unilateral neglect. Brain and Cognition, 23, 145-165.

8. Mattingley, J.B., Pierson, J.A., Bradshaw, J.L., Phillips, J.G. & Bradshaw, J.A. (1993). To see or not to see: the effects of visible and invisible cues on line bisection judgements in unilateral neglect. Neuropsychologia, 31, 1201-1215.

9. Georgiou, N., Iansek, R., Bradshaw, J.L., Phillips, J.G., Mattingley, J.B. & Bradshaw, J.A. (1993). An evaluation of internal cues in the pathogenesis of Parkinsonian hypokinesia. Brain, 116, 1575-1587.

10. Bradshaw, J.L., Willmott, C.J., Umiltà, C., Phillips, J.G., Bradshaw, J.A. & Mattingley, J.B. (1994). Hand-hemispace spatial compatibility, precueing, and stimulus onset asynchrony. Psychological Research, 56, 170-178.

11. Jones, D.L., Bradshaw, J.L., Phillips, J.G., Iansek, R., Mattingley, J.B. & Bradshaw, J.A. (1994). Allocation of attention to programming of movement sequences in Parkinson's disease. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, 16, 117-128.

12. Georgiou, N., Bradshaw, J.L., Iansek, R., Phillips, J.G., Mattingley, J.B. & Bradshaw, J.A. (1994). Reduction in external cues and movement sequencing in Parkinson's disease. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry, 57, 368-370.

13. Morgan, M., Phillips, J.G., Bradshaw, J.L., Mattingley, J.B., Iansek, R. & Bradshaw, J.A. (1994). Age related motor slowness: simply strategic? Journal of Gerontology: Medical Sciences Section, 49, 133-139.

14. Mattingley, J.B. & Bradshaw, J.L. (1994). How many neglects? Some considerations based on anatomy and information processing. Neuropsychological Rehabilitation, 4, 169-172.

15. Morgan, M., Bradshaw, J.L., Phillips, J.G., Mattingley, J.B., Iansek, R. & Bradshaw, J.A. (1994). Effects of age and hand upon abductive and adductive movements: a kinematic analysis. Brain and Cognition, 25, 194-206.

16. Mattingley, J.B., Bradshaw, J.L., Bradshaw, J.A. & Nettleton, N.C. (1994). Residual rightward attentional bias after apparent recovery from right hemisphere damage: implications for a multicomponent model of neglect. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry, 57, 597-604.

17. Mattingley, J.B., Phillips, J.G. & Bradshaw, J.L. (1994). Impairments of movement initiation and execution in unilateral neglect: a kinematic analysis of directional bradykinesia. Neuropsychologia, 32, 1111-1134.

18. Mattingley, J.B., Bradshaw, J.L., Nettleton, N.C. & Bradshaw, J.A. (1994). Can task specific perceptual bias be distinguished from unilateral neglect? Neuropsychologia, 32, 805-817.

19. Mattingley, J.B. & Bradshaw, J.L. (1994). Can tactile neglect occur at an intra-limb level? Vibrotactile reaction times in patients with right hemisphere damage. Behavioural Neurology, 7, 67-77.

20. Mattingley, J.B., Bradshaw, J.L., Bradshaw, J.A. & Nettleton, N.C. (1994). Recovery from directional hypokinesia and bradykinesia in unilateral neglect. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, 16, 861-876.

21. Mattingley, J.B., Bradshaw, J.L. & Bradshaw, J.A. (1994). Horizontal visual motion modulates focal attention in left unilateral neglect. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry, 57, 1228-1235.

22. Mattingley, J.B., Bradshaw, J.L. & Bradshaw, J.A. (1995). The effects of unilateral visuospatial neglect on perception of Müller-Lyer illusory figures. Perception, 24, 415-433.

23. Driver, J. & Mattingley, J.B. (1995). Selective attention in humans: normality and pathology. Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 5, 191-197.

24. Irvine, D.R.F., Park, V.N. & Mattingley, J.B. (1995). Responses of neurons in the inferior colliculus of the rat to interaural time and intensity differences in transient stimuli: implications for the latency hypothesis. Hearing Research, 85, 127-141.

25. Rorden, C., Mattingley, J.B., Karnath, H-O. & Driver, J. (1997). Visual extinction and prior entry: impaired perception of temporal order with intact motion perception after unilateral parietal damage. Neuropsychologia, 35, 421-433.

26. Mattingley, J.B., Davis, G. & Driver, J. (1997). Preattentive filling-in of visual surfaces in parietal extinction. Science, 275, 671-674.

27. Mattingley, J.B., Driver, J., Beschin, N. & Robertson, I.H. (1997). Attentional competition between modalities: extinction between touch and vision after right hemisphere damage. Neuropsychologia, 35, 867-880.

28. Walker, R. & Mattingley, J.B. (1997). Ghosts in the machine? Pathological visual completion phenomena in the damaged brain. Neurocase, 3, 313-335.

29. Mattingley, J.B., Husain, M., Rorden, C., Kennard, C. & Driver, J. (1998). Motor function of human inferior parietal lobe revealed in unilateral neglect patients. Nature, 392, 179-182.

30. Driver, J. & Mattingley, J.B. (1998). Parietal neglect and visual awareness. Nature Neuroscience, 1, 17-22.

31. Husain, M., Mattingley, J.B., Rorden, C., Kennard, C. & Driver, J. (1998). Reaching in parietal neglect: Response to D.P. Carey: Action, perception, cognition, and the inferior parietal cortex. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 2, 164-166.

32. Mattingley, J.B., Corben, L.A., Bradshaw, J.L., Bradshaw, J.A., Phillips, J.G., & Horne, M.K. (1998). The effects of competition and motor reprogramming on visuomotor selection in unilateral neglect. Experimental Brain Research, 120, 243-256.

33. Mattingley, J.B., Robertson I.H., & Driver, J. (1998). Modulation of covert visual attention by hand movement: evidence from parietal extinction after right-hemisphere damage. Neurocase, 4, 245-253.

34. Robertson, I.H., Mattingley, J.B., Rorden, C. & Driver, J. (1998). Phasic alerting of neglect patients overcomes their spatial deficit in visual awareness. Nature, 395, 169-172.

35. Walker, R. & Mattingley, J.B. (1998). Pathological completion: the blind leading the mind? Behavioural and Brain Science, 21, 778-779.

36. Sheppard, D., Bradshaw, J.L., Mattingley, J.B. & Lee, P. (1999). Effects of stimulant medication on the lateralisation of line bisection judgements of children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry, 66, 57-63.

37. Nicholls, M.E.R., Bradshaw, J.L. & Mattingley, J.B. (1999). Free-viewing perceptual asymmetries for the judgement of brightness, numerosity and size. Neuropsychologia, 37, 307-314.

38. Mattingley, J.B. (1999). Right hemisphere contributions to attention and intention. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry, 67, 5.

39. Mattingley, J.B. (1999). Attention, consciousness, and the damaged brain: insights from parietal neglect and extinction. Psyche, 5 (14), http://psyche.cs.monash.edu.au/v5/psyche-5-14-mattingley.html

40. McLennan, N., Georgiou, N. Mattingley, J.B., Bradshaw, J.L. & Chiu, E. (2000). Motor imagery in Huntington's disease. Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, 22, 379-390.

41. Husain, M., Mattingley, J.B., Rorden, C., Kennard, C. & Driver, J. (2000). Distinguishing sensory and motor biases in parietal and frontal neglect. Brain, 123, 1643-1659.

42. Mattingley, J.B., Pisella, L., Rossetti, Y., Rode, G., Tilikete, C., Boisson, D. & Vighetto, A.. (2000). Visual extinction in oculocentric coordinates: a selective bias in dividing attention between hemifields. Neurocase, 6, 465-475.

43. Bradshaw, J.L. & Mattingley, J.B. (2001). ‘Allodynia': A sensory analogue of motor mirror neurons in a hyperaesthetic patient reporting instantaneous discomfort to another's perceived sudden minor injury? Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry, 70, 135-136.

44. Mattingley, J.B., Rich, A.N., Yelland, G. & Bradshaw, J.L. (2001). Unconscious priming eliminates automatic binding of colour and alphanumeric form in synaesthesia. Nature, 410, 580-582.

45. Corben, L.A., Mattingley, J.B. & Bradshaw, J.L. (2001). A kinematic analysis of distractor interference effects during visually guided action in spatial neglect. Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society, 7, 334-343.

46. Nicholls, M.E.R., Bradshaw, J.L. & Mattingley, J.B. (2001). Unilateral hemispheric activation does not affect free-viewing perceptual asymmetries. Brain & Cognition, 46, 219-223.

47. Sheppard, D.M., Bradshaw, J.L., & Mattingley, J.B. (2002). Abnormal line bisection judgements in children with Tourette's syndrome. Neuropsychologia, 40, 253-259.

48. Rich, A.N. & Mattingley, J.B. (2002). Anomalous perception in synaesthesia: a cognitive neuroscience perspective. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 3, 43-52.

49. Slavin, M.J., Mattingley, J.B., Bradshaw, J.L., & Storey, E. (2002). Local-global processing in Alzheimer's disease: an examination of interference, inhibition and priming. Neuropsychologia, 40, 1173-1186.

50. Mattingley, J.B. (2002). Visuomotor adaptation to optical prisms: a new cure for spatial neglect? Cortex, 38, 277-283.

51. Chambers, C.D., Mattingley, J.B. & Moss, S.A. (2002). The octave illusion revisited: suppression or fusion between ears? Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception & Performance, 28, 1288-1302.

52. Berberovic, N. & Mattingley, J.B. (2003). Effects of prismatic adaptation on judgements of spatial extent in peripersonal and extrapersonal space. Neuropsychologia, 41, 493-503.

53. Rich, A.N. & Mattingley, J.B. (2003). The effects of stimulus competition and voluntary attention on colour-graphemic synaesthesia. NeuroReport, 14, 1793-1798.

54. Nicholls, M.E.R., Mattingley, J.B., Bradshaw, J.L., & Krins, P. (2003). Trunk- and head-centred spatial coordinates do not affect free-viewing perceptual asymmetries. Brain and Cognition, 53, 247-252.

55. Klimkeit, E.I., Mattingley, J.B., Sheppard, D.M., Lee, P. & Bradshaw, J.L. (2003). Perceptual asymmetries in normal children and children with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Brain and Cognition, 52, 205-215.

56. Bellgrove, M. A., Collinson, S., Mattingley, J.B., Pantelis, C., Fitzgerald, P.B., James, A.C., & Bradshaw, J.L. (2004). Attenuation of perceptual asymmetries in patients with early-onset schizophrenia: evidence in favour of reduced hemispheric differentiation in schizophrenia? Laterality, 9, 79-91.

57. Mattingley, J.B., Berberovic, N., Corben, L., Slavin, M.J., Nicholls, M.E.R. & Bradshaw, J.L. (2004). The greyscales task: a perceptual measure of attentional bias following right hemisphere damage. Neuropsychologia, 42, 387-394.

58. Nicholls, M.E.R., Hughes, G., Mattingley, J.B. & Bradshaw, J.L. (2004). Are object- and space-based attentional biases both important to free-viewing perceptual asymmetries? Experimental Brain Research, 154, 513-520.

59. Chambers, C.D., Payne, J.M., Stokes, M.G. & Mattingley, J.B. (2004). Fast and slow parietal pathways mediate spatial attention. Nature Neuroscience, 7, 217-218.

60. Williams, M & Mattingley, J.B. (2004). Unconscious processing of non-threatening facial emotion in parietal extinction. Experimental Brain Research, 154, 403-406.

61. Williams, M.A., Morris, A.P., McGlone, F., Abbott, D.F., & Mattingley, J.B. (2004). Amygdala responses to fearful and happy facial expressions under conditions of binocular suppression. Journal of Neuroscience, 24, 2898-2904.

62. Nicholls, M.E.R., Mattingley, J.B., Berberovic, N., Smith, A., & Bradshaw, J.L. (2004). An investigation of the relationship between free-viewing perceptual asymmetries for vertical and horizontal stimuli. Cognitive Brain Research, 19, 289-301.

63. Pisella, L., Berberovic, N. & Mattingley, J.B. (2004). Impaired working memory for location but not for colour or shape in visual neglect: a comparison of parietal and non-parietal lesions. Cortex, 40, 379-390.

64. Berberovic, N., Pisella, L., Morris, A.P. & Mattingley, J.B. (2004). Prismatic adaptation reduces biased temporal order judgements in spatial neglect. NeuroReport, 15, 1199-1204.

65. Morris, A.P., Kritikos, A., Berberovic, N., Pisella, L., Chambers, C.D., & Mattingley, J.B. (2004). Prismatic adaptation and spatial attention: a study of visual search in normals and patients with unilateral neglect. Cortex, 40, 703-721.

66. Chambers, C.D., Mattingley, J.B., & Moss, S.A. (2004). Reconsidering evidence for the suppression model of the octave illusion. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 11, 642-666.

67. Chambers, C.D., Mattingley, J.B., & Moss, S.A. (2004). The suppression model remains unsound: A reply to Deutsch. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 11, 677-680.

68. Klimkeit, E.I., Mattingley, J.B., Sheppard, D.M., Farrow, M., & Bradshaw, J.L. (2004). Examining the development of attention and executive functions in children with a novel paradigm. Child Neuropsychology, 10, 201-211.

69. Chambers, C.D., Stokes, M.G., & Mattingley, J.B. (2004). Modality-specific control of strategic spatial attention in parietal cortex. Neuron, 44, 925-930.

70. Pisella, L. & Mattingley, J.B. (2004). The contribution of spatial remapping impairments to unilateral neglect. Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews, 28, 181-200.

71. Williams, M.A., Moss, S.A., Bradshaw, J.L., & Mattingley, J.B. (2005). Look at me, I'm smiling: visual search for threatening and non-threatening facial expressions. Visual Cognition, 12, 29-50.

72. Williams, M.A., McGlone, F., Abbott, D.F. & Mattingley, J.B. (2005). Differential amygdala response to happy and fearful facial expressions depends on selective attention. NeuroImage, 24, 417-425.

73. Chambers, C.D., Mattingley, J.B., & Moss, S.A. (2005). Does selective attention influence the octave illusion? Perception, 34, 217-229.

74. Klimkeit, E.I., Mattingley, J.B., Sheppard, D.M., Lee, P. & Bradshaw, J.L. (2005). Motor preparation, motor execution, attention, and executive functions in attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Child Neuropsychology, 11, 153-173.

75. Eramudugolla, R., Irvine, D.R.F., McAnally, K.I., Martin, R.L., & Mattingley, J.B. (2005). Directed attention eliminates ‘change deafness' in complex auditory scenes'. Current Biology, 15, 1108-1113.

76. Kritikos, A., Breen, N. & Mattingley, J.B. (2005). Anarchic hand syndrome: bimanual co-ordination and sensitivity to irrelevant information in unimanual reaches. Cognitive Brain Research, 24, 634-647.

77. Nicholls, M.E.R., Mattingley, J.B. & Bradshaw, J.L. (2005). The effect of strategy on pseudoneglect for luminance judgements. Cognitive Brain Research, 25, 71-77.

78. Chambers, C.D. & Mattingley, J.B. (2005). Neurodisruption of selective attention: insights and implications. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 9, 542-550.

79. Rich, A.N., Bradshaw, J.L. & Mattingley, J.B. (2005). A systematic, large-scale study of synaesthesia: implications for the role of early experience in lexical-colour associations. Cognition, 98, 53-84.

80. Stokes, M. G., Chambers, C. D., Gould, I. C., Henderson, T. R., Janko, N. E., Allen, N. & Mattingley, J. B. (2005). Simple metric for scaling motor threshold based on scalp-cortex distance: Application to studies using transcranial magnetic stimulation. Journal of Neurophysiology, 94, 4520-4527.

81. Snow, J.C. & Mattingley, J.B. (2006). Goal-driven selective attention in patients with right hemisphere lesions: how intact is the ipsilesional field? Brain, 129, 168-181.

82. Ward, J. & Mattingley, J.B. (2006). Synaesthesia: an overview of contemporary findings and controversies. Cortex, 42, 129-136.

83. Edquist, J., Rich, A.N., Brinkman, C. & Mattingley, J.B. (2006). Do synaesthetic colours act as unique features in visual search? Cortex, 42, 222-231.

84. Mattingley, J.B., Payne, J.M., & Rich, A.N. (2006). Attentional load attenuates synaesthetic priming effects in grapheme-colour synaesthesia. Cortex, 42, 213-221.

85. Chambers, C.D., Bellgrove, M.A., Stokes, M.G., Henderson, T.R., Garavan, H., Robertson, I.H., Morris, A.P. & Mattingley, J.B. (2006). Executive 'brake failure' following deactivation of human frontal lobe. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 18, 444-455.

86. Williams, M.A. & Mattingley, J.B. (2006). Do angry men get noticed? Current Biology, 16, R402-R404.

87. Rich, A.N., Williams, M.A., Puce, A., Syngeniotis, A., Howard, M.A., McGlone, F., & Mattingley, J.B. (2006). Neural correlates of imagined and synaesthetic colours. Neuropsychologia, 44, 2918-2925.

88. Williams, I.M., Mulhall, L., Mattingley, J.B., Lueck, C., & Abel, L., (2006). Optokinetic nystagmus as an assessment of visual attention to divided stimuli. Journal of Clinical Neuroscience, 13, 828-833.

89. Nicholls, M.E.R., Smith, A., Mattingley, J.B. & Bradshaw, J.L. (2006). The effect of body- and environment-centred coordinates on free-viewing perceptual asymmetries for vertical and horizontal stimuli. Cortex, 42, 336-346.

90. Bellgrove, M.A., Mattingley, J.B., Hawi, Z., Mullins, C., Kirley, A., Gill, M. & Robertson, I.H (2006). Impaired temporal resolution of visual attention and DBH genotype in attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Biological Psychiatry, 60, 1039-1045.

91. Chambers, C.D., Stokes, M.G., Janko, N.E., & Mattingley, J.B. (2006). Enhancement of visual selection during transient disruption of parietal cortex. Brain Research, 1097, 149-155.

92. Snow, J.C. & Mattingley, J.B. (2006). Stimulus- and goal-driven biases of selective attention following unilateral brain damage: implications for rehabilitation of spatial neglect and extinction. Restorative Neurology and Neuroscience, 24, 233-245.

93. Nicholls, M.E.R, Loftus, A., Meyer, K., Mattingley, J.B. (2007). Things that go bump on the right: The effect of unimanual activity on rightward collisions. Neuropsychologia, 45, 1122-1126.

94. Chambers, C.D., Payne, J.M., & Mattingley, J.B. (2007). Parietal disruption impairs reflexive spatial orienting within and between sensory modalities. Neuropsychologia, 45, 1715-1724.

95. Eramudugolla, R., Irvine, D.R.F., & Mattingley, J.B. (2007). Association between auditory and visual symptoms of unilateral spatial neglect. Neuropsychologia, 45, 2631-2637.

96. Stokes, M.G., Chambers, C.D., Gould, I.C., English, T., McNaught, E., McDonald, O., & Mattingley, J.B. (2007). Distance-adjusted motor threshold for transcranial magnetic stimulation. Clinical Neurophysiology, 118, 1617-1625.

97. Morris, A.P., Chambers, C.D., & Mattingley, J.B. (2007). Parietal stimulation destabilises spatial updating across saccadic eye movements. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (USA), 104, 9069-9074.

98. Williams, M.A., Berberovic, N., & Mattingley, J.B. (2007). Abnormal fMRI adaptation to unfamiliar faces in a case of developmental prosopamnesia. Current Biology, 17, 1259-1264.

99. Kashima, Y., Gurumurthy, A.K., Ouschan, L., Chong, T., & Mattingley, J.B. (2007). Connectionism and self: James, Mead, and the stream of enculturated consciousness. Psychological Inquiry. 18, 73-96.

100. Kashima, Y., Gurumurthy, A.K., Chong, T., & Mattingley, J.B. (2007). Agency, Sociality, and Time. Psychological Inquiry. 18, 129-137.

101. Hester, R., Barre, N., Mattingley, J.B., Foxe, J.J., & Garavan, H. (2007). Avoiding another mistake: error and post-error neural activity associated with adaptive post-error behaviour change. Cognitive, Affective and Behavioural Neuroscience, 7, 317-326.

102. Chambers, C.D., Bellgrove, M.A., Gould, I.C., English, T., Garavan, H., McNaught, E., Kamke, M., & Mattingley, J.B. (2007). Dissociable mechanisms of cognitive control in prefrontal and premotor cortex. Journal of Neurophysiology, 98, 3638-3647.

103. Chong, T., Williams, M.A., Cunnington, R., & Mattingley, J.B. (2008). Selective attention modulates inferior frontal gyrus activity during action observation. Neuroimage, 40, 298-307.

104. Loftus, A.M., Nicholls, M.E.R., Mattingley, J.B., & Bradshaw, J.L. (2008). Left to right: representational biases for numbers and the effect of visuomotor adaptation. Cognition, 107, 1048-1058.

105. Eramudugolla, R., McAnally, K.I., Martin, R.L., Irvine, D.R.F., Mattingley, J.B. (2008). The role of spatial attention in auditory search. Hearing Research, 238, 139 - 146.

106. Loftus, A.M., Nicholls, M.E.R., Mattingley, J.B., & Bradshaw, J.L. (2008). Numerical processing overcomes left neglect for the greyscales task. Neuroreport, 19, 835-838.

107. Snow, J.C. & Mattingley, J.B. (2008). Central perceptual load does not reduce ipsilesional flanker interference in parietal extinction. Neuropsychology, 22, 371-382.

108. Bellgrove, M.A., & Mattingley, J.B. (2008). Molecular genetics of attention. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1129, 200 - 212.

109. Hester, R., Barre, N., Murphy, K., Silk, T., & Mattingley, J.B. (2008). Human medial frontal cortex activity predicts learning from errors. Cerebral Cortex, 18, 1933-1940.

110. Williams, M.A., Visser, T.A.W., Cunnington, R. & Mattingley, J.B. (2008). Attenuation of neural responses in primary visual cortex during the attentional blink. Journal of Neuroscience, 28, 9890-9894.

111. Williams, M.A., McGlone, F., Abbott, D.F., & Mattingley, J.B. (2008). Stimulus-driven and strategic neural responses to fearful and happy facial expressions in humans. European Journal of Neuroscience, 27, 3074-3082.

112. Nyugen, H.N., Mattingley, J.B., & Abel, L. (2008). Extraversion degrades performance on the anti-saccade task. Brain Research, 1231, 81-85.

113. Chong, T.J., Cunnington, R., Williams, M.A., Kanwisher, N. & Mattingley, J.B. (2008). fMRI adaptation reveals mirror neurons in human inferior parietal cortex. Current Biology, 18, 1576-1580.

114. Eramudugolla, R. & Mattingley, J.B. (2009). Spatial gradient for unique-feature detection in patients with unilateral neglect: Evidence from auditory and visual search. Neurocase, 15, 24-31.

115. Chong, T.J., Cunnington, R., Williams, M.A., & Mattingley, J.B. (2009). The role of selective attention in matching observed and executed actions. Neuropsychologia, 47, 786-795.

116. Mattingley, J.B. (2009). Attention, automaticity and awareness in synaesthesia. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1156, 141- 167.

117. Loftus, A., Nicholls, M.E.R, Mattingley, J.B., Chapman, H.L. & Bradshaw, J.L. (2009). Pseudoneglect for the bisection of mental number lines. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 62, 925-945.

118. Chan, E., Mattingley, J.B., Huang-Pollack, C., English, T., Hester, R.L., Vance, A. & Bellgrove, M.A. (2009). Selective attention deficits in ADHD are spatially dependent. Journal of Child Psychology & Psychiatry, 50, 1064-1072.

119. Hester, R. Madeley, J., Murphy, K., & Mattingley, J.B. (2009). Learning from errors: Error-related neural activity predicts improvements in future inhibitory control performance. Journal of Neuroscience, 29, 7158 - 7165.

120. Molenberghs, P., Cunnington, R., & Mattingley, J.B. (2009). Is the mirror neuron system involved in imitation? A short review and meta-analysis. Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 33, 975-980.

121. McAnally, K.I., Martin, R.L., Eramudugolla, R., Stuart, G.W., Irvine, D.R.F., & Mattingley, J.B. (in press). A dual-process account of auditory change detection. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance. (Accepted 18/05/09).

122. Rich, A.N. & Mattingley, J.B. (in press). Out of sight, out of mind: the attentional blink can eliminate synaesthetic colours. Cognition. (Accepted 01/10/09).

123. Molenberghs, P., Brander, C., Mattingley, J.B., & Cunnington, R. (in press). The role of the superior temporal sulcus and the mirror neuron system in imitation. Human Brain Mapping. (Accepted 07/10/09).

124. Baumann, O., Chan, E., & Mattingley, J.B. (in press). Dissociable neural circuits for encoding and retrieval of object locations during active navigation in humans. NeuroImage. (Accepted 08/10/09).


Book Chapters


1. Mattingley, J.B. (1996). Paterson and Zangwill's (1944) case of unilateral neglect: insights from 50 years of experimental inquiry. In: C. Code, C.W. Wallesch, Y. Joanette, & A.R. Lecours (Eds.). Classic Cases in Neuropsychology (pp.173-188). Hove: Psychology Press.

2. Bradshaw, J.L., Phillips, J.G., Cunnington, R., Georgiou, N., Jones, D., Mattingley, J.B., Iansek, R. and Chiu, E. (1996). Evolution of a serial choice reaction time procedure for the use in studying movement and attention disorder. In U. Castiello (ed.), Mechanisms of Perception for the Control of Action: Proceedings of the First Perception for Action Conference. Churchill: Monash University, pp.57-62.

3. Mattingley, J.B. & Driver, J. (1997). Distinguishing sensory and motor deficits after parietal damage: an evaluation of response selection biases in unilateral neglect. In. P. Thier & H.-O. Karnath (Eds.). Parietal Lobe Contributions to Orientation in 3D Space. Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag, pp. 309-338.

4. Driver, J., Mattingley, J.B., Rorden, C. & Davis, G. (1997). Extinction as a paradigm measure of attentional bias and restricted capacity following brain injury. In. P. Thier & H.-O. Karnath (Eds.). Parietal Lobe Contributions to Orientation in 3D Space. Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag, pp. 401-430.

5. Mattingley, J.B. (2000). Competitive interactions in perception and action: evidence from patients with parietal extinction. In. K.M.B. Bennett & S.J. Gregory (Eds.). Perception and Cognition for Action: Proceedings of the III Annual Perception for Action Conference. Melbourne: La Trobe University Press, pp.117-133.

6. Rich, A.N., Mattingley, J.B., Yelland, G. & Bradshaw, J.L., (2000). Conscious and non-conscious information processing in synaesthesia: a cognitive neuroscience perspective. In. C. Davis, T. van Gelder & R. Wales (Eds.). Cognitive Science in Australia, 2000: Proceedings of the Fifth Biennial Conference of the Australasian Cognitive Science Society. Adelaide: Causal.

7. Scott, S.C., Mattingley, J.B., Manly, T. & Wise, R.J.S. (2000). Spatial attention deficits and the perception of interaural rhythmic sequences - a preliminary analysis. In. P. Desain & L. Windsor (Eds.). Rhythm Perception and Production - Studies on New Music Research 3. Lisse: Swets & Zeitlinger, pp. 183-192.

8. Mattingley, J.B. (2002). Spatial extinction and its relation to normal attention. In. H.-O. Karnath, A.D. Milner & G. Vallar (eds.) Cognitive and neural bases of spatial neglect. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 289-309.

9. Mattingley, J.B. & Walker, R. (2003). The blind leading the mind: pathological visual completion in hemianopia and spatial neglect. In. Pessoa, L. & De Weerd, P.(eds.) Filling-in: From perceptual completion to skill learning. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 207-227.

10. Snow, J.C. & Mattingley, J.B. (2003). Perception, unconscious. In. Nadel, L. (ed.) Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science. London: Macmillan, pp. 517-526.

11. Manly, T. & Mattingley, J.B. (2004). Attention, visuo-spatial disorders and spatial neglect. In. Goldstein, L.H. & McNeil, J. (eds.) Clinical neuropsychology: A practical guide to assessment and management for clinicians. Chichester: Wiley, pp. 229-252.

12. Mattingley, J.B. & Rich, A.N. (2004). Neural and perceptual correlates of anomalous colour experience in synaesthesia. In. Calvert, G., Spence, C. & Stein, B. (eds.) Handbook of Multisensory Processes. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 851-866.

13. Rich, A.N. & Mattingley, J.B. (2005). Can attention modulate colour-graphemic synaesthesia? In. Robertson, L.C. & Sagiv, N. (Eds.). Synesthesia: Perspectives from Cognitive Neuroscience. New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 108-123.

14. Chong, T.J. & Mattingley, J.B. (2009) Automatic and controlled processing within the mirror neuron system. In. Pineda, J. (Ed.) Mirror Neuron Systems: The Role of Mirroring Processes in Social Cognition. New York: Humana Press, pp. 213-234.