Overview
Background
Prof. Derek Arnold
Prof. Arnold studied at Macquarie University before taking up research positions at the University of Sydney and University College London. He took up a continuing position at the University of Queensland in April, 2006.
Availability
- Professor Derek Arnold is:
- Available for supervision
- Media expert
Fields of research
Qualifications
- Doctor of Philosophy, Macquarie University
Research interests
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Sensory Processing
I am interested in how brain activity generates conscious perceptual experiences. Some of my specific interests are... 1) Imagined Sensory Experiences: People have different levels of ability to have imagined sensory experiences. Some people cannot evoke imagined experiences at all (aphantasics) while others have unusually intense imagined experiences (hyperphantasics / synaesthetes). What features of brain activity are responsible for these differences? 2) The human brain has been described as a predictive machine. How does it generate and implement the predictions that allow us to interact with our dynamic environment - so we can catch or avoid flying objects? 3) The human brain generates feelings of confidence whenever we make a perceptual decision. What features of sensory brain activity govern these feelings of confidence? 4) Humans can judge the relative timing of different events, and the extent of time that passes during an event. How do our brains encode time and timing? 5) In the human brain, different sensory analyses are often independent of one another, taking place in different brain regions and completed at different rates. How do these analyses combine to create subjectively unified experiences?
Research impacts
Prof. Arnold's research is focussed on understanding the computational processes and brain activity that underlie perceptual experience, decisions and feelings of confidence. This basic science can inform the development of advanced technologies, such as brain-computer interfaces and artifical visual systems. For these reasons, Prof. Arnold's research is cited in patent applications.
Works
Search Professor Derek Arnold’s works on UQ eSpace
2001
Journal Article
Orthogonal adaptation improves orientation discrimination
Clifford, Colin W. G., Wyatt, Anna M. A., Arnold, Derek H., Smith, Stuart T. and Wenderoth, Peter (2001). Orthogonal adaptation improves orientation discrimination. Vision Research, 41 (2), 151-159. doi: 10.1016/S0042-6989(00)00248-0
2000
Journal Article
Dissociable factors affect speed perception and discrimination
Clifford, C. W. G., Arnold, D. H. and Wenderoth, P. (2000). Dissociable factors affect speed perception and discrimination. Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology, 28 (3), 230-232. doi: 10.1046/j.1442-9071.2000.00306.x
Funding
Current funding
Supervision
Availability
- Professor Derek Arnold is:
- Available for supervision
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Supervision history
Current supervision
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Doctor Philosophy
Aphantasia: Predicting the intensity of imagined sensory experiences from measures of brain activity
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Jess Taubert
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Doctor Philosophy
Investigating the Relationship Between Prediction and Attention in Response to Emotional Stimuli in the Human Brain
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Jess Taubert, Dr Margaret Moore
Completed supervision
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2022
Doctor Philosophy
The perceptual and neural consequences of different types of prediction
Principal Advisor
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2020
Doctor Philosophy
Measuring perception with confidence
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Thomas Suddendorf
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2020
Doctor Philosophy
Malleability in vision: Investigations into the temporal integration of motion and functional blindness around the physiological blind spot
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Guy Wallis
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2016
Doctor Philosophy
Norms are not the norm: Testing theories of sensory encoding using visual aftereffects
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Guy Wallis
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2012
Doctor Philosophy
Staying in Sync: Strategies to determine audiovisual synchrony in temporally cluttered environments
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Jason Mattingley
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2010
Doctor Philosophy
Pencils & erasers: Interactions between motion and spatial coding in human vision
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Jason Mattingley
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2013
Doctor Philosophy
The perception of invariant and variant facial cues: Race, Age, Gender and Emotional features are processed interdependently
Associate Advisor
Media
Enquiries
Contact Professor Derek Arnold directly for media enquiries about:
- Brain and perception
- Neuroscience and perception
- Perception
- Psychology and perception
- Visual perception
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