Recent  Publications

Hoffman, J.E. (1998), Visual attention and eye movements. In H. Pashler (Ed.), Attention. London: University College London Press, 119-154

Hoffman, J. E. Stages of Processing in Visual Search and Attention. (1999). In Challis, B., & Velichovsky, B. (Eds.) Stratification in cognition and consciousness. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins

Jordan, H., Reiss, J. E., Hoffman, J.E., and Landau, B. L. (2002). Intact Perception of Biological Motion in the Face of Profound Spatial Deficits: Williams Syndrome. Psychological Science, 13, 2, 162-167.

Hoffman, J.E., Landau, B. & Pagani, B. (2003).  Spatial Breakdown in Spatial Construction: Evidence from Eye Fixations in Children with Williams Syndrome. Cognitive Psychology, 45, 260-301.

 

Landau, B., Hoffman, J. E., Reiss, J., Dilks, D.D., Lakusta, L., &  Chunyo, G. (in press)  Specialization and Breakdown in Spatial Cognition: Lessons from Williams syndrome. To appear in C. Morris, H. Lenhoff, & P. Wang (Eds.), Williams-Beuren Syndrome: Research and Clinical PerspectivesBaltimoreJohns Hopkins University Press

Landau, B., & Hoffman, J. E. (2005). Parallels between spatial cognition and spatial language: Evidence from Williams syndrome. Journal of Memory and Language, 53(2), 163-185.

O'Hearn, K., Landau, B., & Hoffman, J. E. (2005). Multiple object tracking in people with Williams syndrome and in normally developing children. Psychological Science, 16(11), 905-912.

Landau, B. L., O’Hearn, K., & Hoffman, J. E. (in press). Tethering to the World, Coming Undone. Chapter in L. B. Smith (Ed.), Volume in Spatial Language Series, Indiana University Press.

Reiss, J. E., Hoffman, J. E., & Landau, B. (2005). Motion processing specialization in Williams syndrome. Vision Research, 45(27), 3379-3390.

Landau, B., Hoffman, J.E., & Kurz, N.(2006). Object recognition with severe spatial deficits in Williams syndrome: sparing and breakdown. Cognition, 100 (3), 483-510.

Landau, B. L., &  Hoffman, J. E. (in press) Explaining selective spatial breakdown in Williams Syndrome: Four principles of normal spatial development and why they matter. In J. Plumert and J. Spencer (Eds.), Emerging landscapes of Mind:  Mapping the nature of change in spatial cognitive development. Oxford University Press. 

 

Intraub, H., Hoffman, J. E., Wetherhold, J., & Stoehs, S. (2006). More than Meets the Eye: The Effect of Planned Fixations on Scene Representation. Perception and Psychophysics, 68(5), 759-769.

 

Reiss, J. E., & Hoffman, J. E. (2006). Object substitution masking interferes with semantic processing: Evidence from event-related potentials. Psychological Science, 17, 1015-1020.

 

Reiss, J. E., & Hoffman, J. E. (2007). Disruption of early face recognition processes by object substitution masking. Visual Cognition, 15 (7), 789-798.

Doran, M. M., Hoffman, J.E., & Scholl, B. J. (in press). The role of eye fixations in concentration and amplification effects during multiple object tracking. Visual Cognition. DEMO