Skip to content

Agnes Rosner

– Tracking the mind's eye –

  • Home
  • Projects
    • Memory and Attention
    • Reasoning and decision making
    • Human Machine Interaction
  • Publications
    • Peer Reviewed
    • Posters and Presentations
    • Invited Talks
    • Workshops
  • Teaching
    • Academic Workshops
    • Lectures and Seminars
    • Supervised Student Work
  • Vita
  • Contact
  • Rosner, A., & von Helversen, B. (2019). Memory shapes judgments: Tracing how memory biases judgments by inducing the retrieval of exemplars. Cognition, 190, 165-169.
  • Titz, J., Scholz, A., & Sedlmeier, P. (2017). Comparing eye trackers by correlating their eye-metric data. Behaviour Research Methods.
  • Scholz, A., Krems, J. F., & Jahn, G. (2017). Watching diagnoses develop: Eye movements reveal symptom processing during diagnostic reasoning. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review.
  • Scholz, A., Klichowicz, A., Krems, J. F. (2017). Covert shifts of attention can account for the functional role of “eye movements to nothing”. Memory & Cognition.
  • Scholz, A., Mehlhorn, K., & Krems, J. F. (2016). Listen up, eye movements play a role in verbal memory retrieval. Psychological Research, 80, 149-158.
  • Tietz, S. (2016). Augenblicke im Fokus. Schweizerischer Nationalfonds - Akademien Schweiz: Horizonte, 111, 38-39.
  • Scholz, A., von Helversen, B., & Rieskamp, J. (2015). Eye movements reveal memory processes during similarity- and rule-based decision making. Cognition, 136, 228–246.
  • Scholz, A., Mehlhorn, K., Bocklisch, F., & Krems, J.F. (2011). Looking at nothing diminishes with practice. In L. Carlson, C. Hoelscher, & T.F. Shipley (Eds.), Proceedings of the 33rd Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society (pp. 1070-1075). Austin, TX: Cognitive Science Society.

Publications

Peer Reviewed

Posters and Presentations

Invited Talks

Workshops

Find me on: OrcID, Google Scholar and Research Gate