Martin Hebart

Martin Hebart was a PhD student in the lab. He now works as a postdoctoral fellow with Chris Baker at the Laboratory of Brain and Cognition at the National Institute of Mental Health. Martin studied Psychology in Erlangen, followed by a half-year research internship with Jason Mattingley at Melbourne University. This made him decide to specialize in the field of Cognitive Neuroscience, so he continued his studies with the Bachelor's and Master's program of Neurocognitive Psychology in Munich. His research involves unconscious visual processing using interocular suppression and fMRI, as well as perceptual decision-making using random dot motion stimuli, signal-detection theory and fMRI.

Personal scientific homepage: http://martin-hebart.de.

Projects

Human visual and parietal cortex encode visual choices independent of motor plans

Hebart MN, Donner TH, Haynes JD

Decoding perceptual decisions and the associated confidence from human brain signals

Hebart MH, Schriever Y, Donner TH, Haynes JD

The Decoding Toolbox (TDT): A new package for multivariate fMRI data analysis under Matlab

Hebart MN, Görgen K, Haynes JD