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The main IP address: 193.61.4.225,Your server United Kingdom,London ISP:Birkbeck College TLD:uk CountryCode:GB
The description :brain & behaviour lab brain & behaviour lab school of psychology birkbeck college malet street, london, wc1e 7hx the brain and behaviour lab studies perception, attention, and the control of a...
This report updates in 06-Jul-2018
Geo IP provides you such as latitude, longitude and ISP (Internet Service Provider) etc. informations. Our GeoIP service found where is host brainb.psyc.bbk.ac.uk. Currently, hosted in United Kingdom and its service provider is Birkbeck College .
Latitude: | 51.508529663086 |
Longitude: | -0.12574000656605 |
Country: | United Kingdom (GB) |
City: | London |
Region: | England |
ISP: | Birkbeck College |
HTTP Header information is a part of HTTP protocol that a user's browser sends to called containing the details of what the browser wants and will accept back from the web server.
cname: | www.ccnl.bbk.ac.uk. |
ipv4: | IP:193.61.4.225 ASN:786 OWNER:JANET Jisc Services Limited, GB Country:GB |
brain & behaviour lab brain & behaviour lab school of psychology birkbeck college malet street, london, wc1e 7hx the brain and behaviour lab studies perception, attention, and the control of action in experiments that measure both overt performance (reaction times, error rates, signal detection quality) as well as brain responses generated by external and internal cognitive processes. we measure event-related brain potentials (erps) as an electrophysiological indicator of ongoing sensory, perceptual, memory-related and motor brain processes. our primary aim is to uncover cognitive mechanisms responsible for the normal performance in healthy adult humans, but we also study the disruption of such mechanism caused by brain damage. our main areas of research are: mechanisms of selective attention how does attending to a particular stimulus, a specific location, or a distinct stimulus attribute (like colour, size, or orientation) influence the processing of stimuli? does attention enhance sensory-perceptual processes, or does it influence later stages of information processing (semantic processing, the selection of responses)? which processes are affected in patients with attentional disorders resulting from brain damage? intermodal attention and crossmodal links in selective attention which mechanisms make it possible to selectively attend to one modality (say, vision) and to ignore another modality (like audition)? do attentional processes within one stimulus modality (like directing attention to a specific location within vision) have any influence on information processing within other modalities? stimulus-response compatibility and perceptuo-motor links are there direct links between perceptual processes and response-related stages that will activate specific responses automatically? can such links even be activated by stimuli that are not consciously perceived? can automatically activated response tendencies be inhibited before they result in inappropriate behaviour? how are motor activation and inhibition affected in neurological patients suffering from disorders in motor control? face perception are there specialised brain processes responsible for the perception and recognition of faces? which processing stages are involved in face recognition? can these stages be influenced by attention? how are they disrupted in brain-damaged patients? is face perception a hard-wired 'module', or does it change during normal development and as a function of expertise? we investigate these questions in close cooperation with the centre for brain and cognitive development . somatosensory processing and attentional selectivity in touch can tactile-spatial attention be flexibly adjusted according to task demands? which are the control processes involved in shifts of tactile attention? how is tactile attention distributed across the body surface and what is the size of the attentional focus? are there externally and/or anatomically defined spatial coordinates involved in shifts of tactile attention? does attention to non-spatial attributes (e.g. intensity) interact with spatial attention in touch, or are these independent processes? are there any links between tactile attention and response preparation? about us | members of staff | publications | centre for brain and cognitive development | homepage birkbeck | homepage psychology web design by sue nicholas and heijo van de werf
http://www.brainb.psyc.bbk.ac.uk/PDF/ACTA.PDF
http://www.brainb.psyc.bbk.ac.uk/PDF/CBR2000.PDF
http://brainb.psyc.bbk.ac.uk/pubMartin/..%5CPDF%5CPBR2002.PDF
http://www.brainb.psyc.bbk.ac.uk/default_publications.htm
http://brainb.psyc.bbk.ac.uk/PDF/CLIPH2~1.PDF
http://www.brainb.psyc.bbk.ac.uk/PDF/RING2.PDF
http://brainb.psyc.bbk.ac.uk/PubMartin/..%5CPDF%5CNR1999.PDF
http://www.brainb.psyc.bbk.ac.uk/PDF/Psychophys1103.pdf
http://brainb.psyc.bbk.ac.uk/John/john.htm
http://brainb.psyc.bbk.ac.uk/Paul/
Whois is a protocol that is access to registering information. You can reach when the website was registered, when it will be expire, what is contact details of the site with the following informations. In a nutshell, it includes these informations;
No such domain ac.uk
REFERRER http://www.nominet.org.uk
REGISTRAR Nominet UK
SERVERS
SERVER ac.uk.whois-servers.net
ARGS ac.uk
PORT 43
TYPE domain
REGISTERED no
DOMAIN
NAME ac.uk
NSERVER
NS2.JA.NET 193.63.105.17
AUTH03.NS.UU.NET 198.6.1.83
NS3.JA.NET 193.63.106.103
NS1.SURFNET.NL 192.87.106.101
NS4.JA.NET 193.62.157.66
WS-FRA1.WIN-IP.DFN.DE 193.174.75.178
NS0.JA.NET 128.86.1.20
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