Daniel Walper
Chemnitz University of Technology
5 Papers
5 Citations
Daniel Walper is an academic researcher from Chemnitz University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gaze & Salience (neuroscience). The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 4 publications. Previous affiliations of Daniel Walper include University of Marburg.
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Papers
Use of Levetiracetam for Post-Traumatic Seizure Prophylaxis in Combat-Related Traumatic Brain Injury.
TL;DR: In this article , Levetiracetam is used for seizure prophylaxis in combat-related TBI, but its efficacy and safety in this patient population has not yet been described.
Optimizing user interfaces in food production: gaze tracking is more sensitive for A-B-testing than behavioral data alone
Daniel Walper,Julia Kassau,Philipp Methfessel,Timo Pronold,Wolfgang Einhäuser +4 more
- 02 Jun 2020
TL;DR: This work examines the usefulness of gaze tracking with a mobile eye-tracker for interface design in an industrial setting, specifically the operation of a food production line, using a mock task that is similar in its interface usage to the actual production task in routine machine operation.
3
Competition with and without priority control: linking rivalry to attention through winner-take-all networks with memory
Svenja Marx,Gina Gruenhage,Daniel Walper,Ueli Rutishauser,Ueli Rutishauser,Wolfgang Einhäuser +5 more
TL;DR: This approach unifies the seemingly distinct phenomena of rivalry, memory, and attention in a single model with competition as the common underlying principle and shows that a network of two coupled WTA circuits replicates three common hallmarks of rivalry.
2
Image database to supplement "Paulus, F.M. et al. Pain empathy but not surprise in response to unexpected action explains arousal related pupil dilation." (VIPER database)
Frieder M. Paulus,Laura Müller-Pinzler,Daniel Walper,Svenja Marx,Lisanne Hamschmidt,Lena Rademacher,Wolfgang Einhäuser +6 more
- 24 Feb 2017
2
Attention in natural scenes: Affective-motivational factors guide gaze independently of visual salience
TL;DR: It is found that highly salient objects guided gaze, but still found additional additive effects of arousal, valence and motivation, confirming that higher‐level factors can also guide attention, as measured by fixations towards objects in natural scenes.