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<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom:8.0pt;line-height:129%"><b>Call
for Papers</b><b><br>
</b></p>
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom:8.0pt;line-height:129%"><b>Rhythms
in Cognition: Revisiting the Evidence | Special Issue at
European Journal of Neuroscience</b><br>
<br>
For details and submission visit: <i><a
class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/page/journal/14609568/homepage/callforpapers.html">https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/page/journal/14609568/homepage/callforpapers.html</a></i><br>
<br>
Guest Editors: Christian Keitel (University of Stirling, UK),
Manuela Ruzzoli (University of Glasgow, UK), Chris Benwell
(University of Dundee, UK), Niko Busch (University of Muenster,
Germany), and Laura Dugué (Université de Paris, Paris Descartes,
France).<br>
<br>
- Submission Deadline: July 31, 2019<span
style="mso-bidi-font-weight:normal"><span
style="font-family:"Calibri",sans-serif;
mso-fareast-font-family:Calibri" lang="EN-GB"><br>
- Online Publication within One Week of Acceptance<br>
- Estimated Date of Publication of Final Issue: Spring 2021
</span></span></p>
<p> Everyday experience may arise from a fundamentally discrete
sampling of our sensory environment, just like a movie consists
of still frames shown in rapid succession. Over the last decade,
brain rhythms have been proposed as the neural implementation of
perceptual sampling and as the basis of cognitive functions such
as attention, memory and language. In an interesting twist
however, more recent negative findings on the role of
pre-stimulus oscillatory phase on perception suggest that
support for discrete sampling as a fundamental mechanism remains
equivocal.<br>
<br>
In our Special Issue, we call for methodologically principled
studies, irrespective of their outcome, to provide us with the
most detailed picture to-date as to the conditions under which
perceptual sampling, and its consequences for cognition, can
(not) be observed. These studies can be original contributions,
replication attempts, pre-registered studies or file-drawer
experiments that have to follow a thorough methodology and thus
allow clear interpretations also of negative findings. We
further welcome dedicated reviews, opinion pieces and
methodological advances. Studies can address perceptual sampling
in vision, audition or other senses by testing its impact on
neuro-physiological or behavioural performance measures
(psychophysics). Authors are encouraged to make their data
openly accessible along with their experimental and analysis
codes in order to foster reproducibility and transparency. We
invite human studies adopting neuroimaging (EEG, iEEG, MEG,
fMRI) and neurostimulation techniques (tES, TMS, sensory
entrainment). Animal studies will be a highly welcome
supplement.<br>
<br>
We are very much looking forward to your submissions to our EJN
Special Issue “Rhythms in Cognition: Revisiting the Evidence”!</p>
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