[visionlist] Highly cited publications on vision in which authors were also subjects?

Simon Rushton RushtonSK at cardiff.ac.uk
Wed May 27 11:57:24 -04 2020


Wohlgemuth, A. (1911). On the after-effect of seen movement.  British Journal of Psychology: Monograph Supplement, 1, 1–117.

And see an editorial that helpfully explains how important the work has proven
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1068/p4304ed

simon

From: visionlist <visionlist-bounces at visionscience.com> on behalf of Gabriel Diaz <gabriel.jacob.diaz at gmail.com>
Reply-To: "gabrieljacobdiaz at gmail.com" <gabrieljacobdiaz at gmail.com>
Date: Wednesday, 27 May 2020 at 3:14 pm
To: "visionlist at visionscience.com" <visionlist at visionscience.com>
Subject: [visionlist] Highly cited publications on vision in which authors were also subjects?

Dear vision community,

In response to a recent proposal to my IRB, I have received a request to provide examples of manuscripts in which the PI is also the subject in the manuscript.  I am hoping that some of you may be able to help me track some down. The more impactful the better, whether that be indicated by citation count, recognition of the publication venue, or any other metric, as long as it will be evident to a non-expert.

Extra points if the study involves some element of motor behavior / perception & action.

Thanks in advance,
- gD
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