prof. dr. Jean Vroomen

prof. dr. Jean Vroomen

Full professor in the Department Cognitive Neuropsychology

TSB: Tilburg School of Social and Behavioral Sciences
TSB: Department of Cognitive Neuropsychology

Bio

Jean Vroomen is full professor in the Department of Cognitive Neuropsychology at Tilburg University, the Netherlands. He received his PhD in 1992 for his research on audiovisual speech. His main research interest is in multisensory perception, audiovisual speech perception, and auditory processing using behavioral measures and EEG. He studies both clinical (autism, schizophrenia) and non-clinical populations, including children and infants.

Courses

Recent publications

  1. Perceptual adaptation to noise vocoded speech by lipread information:…

    Pour Hashemi, F., Baart, M., & Vroomen, J. (Accepted/In press). Perceptual adaptation to noise vocoded speech by lipread information: No difference between dyslexic and typical readers. Multisensory Research.
  2. The multimodal trust effects of face, voice, and sentence content

    Syed, I., Baart, M., & Vroomen, J. (Accepted/In press). The multimodal trust effects of face, voice, and sentence content. Multisensory Research.
  3. Opposing serial dependencies revealed for sequences of auditory emoti…

    Van der Burg, E., Baart, M., Vroomen, J., Zhang, H., & Alais, D. (Accepted/In press). Opposing serial dependencies revealed for sequences of auditory emotional stimuli. Perception.
  4. Neural responses to facial attractiveness - Event-related potentials …

    Revers, H., Van Deun, K., Vroomen, J., & Bastiaansen, M. (2023). Neural responses to facial attractiveness: Event-related potentials differentiate between salience and valence effects. Biological Psychology, 179, Article 108549.
  5. Zooming on the spectrum - Exploring the relationship between Zoom-fat…

    van Laarhoven, T., Bögels, S., Vroomen, J., & Swerts, M. (2023). Zooming on the spectrum: Exploring the relationship between Zoom-fatigue, autistic traits and sensory sensitivity. Poster session presented at International Society for Autism Research (INSAR) 22nd annual meeting, Stockholm, Sweden.

Find an expert or expertise