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Associate Professor Stefanie Becker
Associate Professor

Stefanie Becker

Email: 
Phone: 
+61 7 334 69517

Overview

Background

Stefanie was awarded a PhD in Cognitive Psychology / Experimental Psychology in 2007, from the University of Bielefeld, Germany, and was subsequently awarded two awards for it (amongst them the National German Dissertation Award). She then took up a 1-year post-doc position with Prof Roger Remington at UQ. Subsequently, her work was supported by various fellowships from UQ and the ARC, allowing Stefanie to focus mainly on research from 2009 - 2018. Afterwards she was employed on a Teaching and Research position at UQ, where she is currently employed as an Associate Professor.

Personal website: www.sibecker.com

Availability

Associate Professor Stefanie Becker is:
Available for supervision

Qualifications

  • Doctor of Philosophy, Universität Bielefeld

Research interests

  • Attention and Eye Movements in Visual Search

    Visual search is one of the most frequent activities of everyday life, and often becomes quite frustrating when we cannot find our keys or phone. One of my core interests is to study the factors and mechanisms that drive visual search, and render it efficient or inefficient. Please see Projects at http://www.sibecker.com for further details.

  • Emotion and Attention

    Can emotional factors such as happy or angry faces involuntarily attract our attention, possibly because angry faces may constitute a threat? In my lab, this question has been intensely studied, often with EEG or eye movements, and our research has shown that both perceptual factors such as saliency and emotional states such as our own mood can modulate attention to emotional faces.

Research impacts

My research focus is broadly in the area of Cognitive Psychology and Neuroscience, and specifically, in attention research. My perhaps most important contribution to date is that I formulated a new relational theory of attention and eye movements (Becker, 2010; JEP-General). Deviating from the most prominent feature-specific theories of attention, my research shows that attention can be tuned in a highly context-dependent manner to objects, to select the reddest, darkest or largest object. There is also a long-standing debate whether attention is controlled by stimulus-driven factors that are outside of of our control or goal-driven factors such as our intentions. My own work shows that we indeed have a large amount of control over visual selective attention, as we can tune attention to sought-after objects which then quickly attract the gaze when they are present. There are however also bottom-up limitations to this goal-driven selection process that can completely frustrate our attempts to find an object.

The findings are relevant, as conscious perception is severely capacity-limited: Attention selects objects for further processing and determines which items we can consciously appraise first. My own relational account has recently been extended to Inattentional Blindness, Awareness and Memory, allowing even more accurate predictions about what items we will consciously perceive first, and which we will miss. This has important implications about how we should design environments to ensure that important signals and signs capture our attention, and prevent that we miss them.

Works

Search Professor Stefanie Becker’s works on UQ eSpace

123 works between 2007 and 2023

121 - 123 of 123 works

2007

Journal Article

Irrelevant singletons in pop-out search: Attentional capture or filtering costs?

Becker, Stefanie (2007). Irrelevant singletons in pop-out search: Attentional capture or filtering costs?. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 33 (4), 764-787. doi: 10.1037/0096-1523.33.4.764

Irrelevant singletons in pop-out search: Attentional capture or filtering costs?

2007

Journal Article

Sensorimotor Supremacy: Investigating Conscious and Unconscious Vision by Masked Priming

Ansorge, Ulrich, Neumann, Odmar, Becker, Stefanie I., Kalberer, Holger and Cruse, Holk (2007). Sensorimotor Supremacy: Investigating Conscious and Unconscious Vision by Masked Priming. Advances in Cognitive Psychology, 3 (1-2), 257-274. doi: 10.2478/v10053-008-0029-9

Sensorimotor Supremacy: Investigating Conscious and Unconscious Vision by Masked Priming

2007

Journal Article

Comparing sensitivity across different processing measures under metacontrast masking conditions

Ansorge, U., Breitmeyer, B. G. and Becker, S. I. (2007). Comparing sensitivity across different processing measures under metacontrast masking conditions. Vision Research, 47 (27), 3335-3349. doi: 10.1016/j.visres.2007.09.009

Comparing sensitivity across different processing measures under metacontrast masking conditions

Funding

Current funding

  • 2024 - 2028
    Can the Relational Account predict search in multiple-element displays?
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2021 - 2025
    Attention vs Perception: When is selection optimal, when relational?
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant

Past funding

  • 2017 - 2020
    Testing a relational account for visual working memory
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2015 - 2016
    Do feature relationships play a role for conscious visual perception and awareness
    UQ Foundation Research Excellence Awards - DVC(R) Funding
    Open grant
  • 2014 - 2018
    Can the relational account of attention explain search in natural environments and inattentional blindness?
    ARC Future Fellowships
    Open grant
  • 2012 - 2014
    Cortical Regulation of Attentional Capture
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2011 - 2014
    The role of relational information in the guidance of visual attention
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant
  • 2011
    An eye-tracking and neuro-stimulation laboratory for cognitive neuroscience research
    UQ Major Equipment and Infrastructure
    Open grant
  • 2010
    Search for emotional schematic faces: What determines the search asymmetry for angry faces?
    UQ Early Career Researcher
    Open grant
  • 2009 - 2011
    Are visual attention and eye movements guided by relational information?
    UQ Postdoctoral Research Fellowship
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Associate Professor Stefanie Becker is:
Available for supervision

Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.

Available projects

  • Attention and eye movements

    There are continuously a range of projects available in my lab to work on visual attention and/or eye movements. The exact topic is negotiated with students. PhD students will learn how to program experiments, analyse the data, present the results to the lab as well as at conferences, and write up the results for publication. The dissertation or PhD thesis usually consists of 3 research articles with 2-3 experiments each, a general introduction and general discussion. Students from my lab are encouraged to present their work at conferences nationally as well as overseas, and to visit other labs to further hone their skills.

Supervision history

Current supervision

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

For media enquiries about Associate Professor Stefanie Becker's areas of expertise, story ideas and help finding experts, contact our Media team:

communications@uq.edu.au