Ophelia Deroy

LMU Munich
Institute of Philosophy, University of London
Institut Jean Nicod
Department of Philosophy- CNRS
PhD, 2008
London, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
  •  925
    The impact of joint attention on the sound-induced flash illusions
    with Lucas Battich, Isabelle Garzorz, and Basil Wahn
    Attention, Perception, and Psychophysics 83 (8). 2021.
    Humans coordinate their focus of attention with others, either by gaze following or prior agreement. Though the effects of joint attention on perceptual and cognitive processing tend to be examined in purely visual environments, they should also show in multisensory settings. According to a prevalent hypothesis, joint attention enhances visual information encoding and processing, over and above individual attention. If two individuals jointly attend to the visual components of an audiovisual eve…Read more
  •  1444
    Cognitive states, such as beliefs, desires and intentions, may influence how we perceive people and objects. If this is the case, are those influences worse when they occur implicitly rather than explicitly? Here we show that cognitive penetration in perception generally involves an implicit component. First, the process of influence is implicit, making us unaware that our perception is misrepresenting the world. This lack of awareness is the source of the epistemic threat raised by cognitive pe…Read more
  •  58
    Many heads are more utilitarian than one
    with Anita Keshmirian and Bahador Bahrami
    Cognition 220 (C): 104965. 2022.
  •  948
    Spatial certainty : Feeling is the truth
    with Merle Fairhurst
    In Tony Cheng, Ophelia Deroy & Charles Spence (eds.), Spatial Senses: Philosophy of Perception in an Age of Science, Routledge. 2019.
    A common sense view is illustrated by Doubting Thomas, and surfaces in many philosophical and psychological writings : Touching is better than seeing. But can we make sense of this privilege? We rule out that it could mean that touch is more informative than vision, more ‘objective’ or more directly in contact with reality. Instead, we propose that touch offers not a perceptual, but a metacognitive advantage: touch is not more objective than vision but rather provides comparatively higher subjec…Read more
  •  1156
    Coordinating attention requires coordinated senses
    with Lucas Battich and Merle T. Fairhurst
    Psychonomic Bulletin and Review 27 (6): 1126-1138. 2020.
    From playing basketball to ordering at a food counter, we frequently and effortlessly coordinate our attention with others towards a common focus: we look at the ball, or point at a piece of cake. This non-verbal coordination of attention plays a fundamental role in our social lives: it ensures that we refer to the same object, develop a shared language, understand each other’s mental states, and coordinate our actions. Models of joint attention generally attribute this accomplishment to gaze co…Read more
  •  127
    Voice over: Audio-visual congruency and content recall in the gallery setting
    with Merle T. Fairhurst and Minnie Scott
    PLoS ONE 12 (6). 2017.
    Experimental research has shown that pairs of stimuli which are congruent and assumed to 'go together' are recalled more effectively than an item presented in isolation. Will this multisensory memory benefit occur when stimuli are richer and longer, in an ecological setting? In the present study, we focused on an everyday situation of audio-visual learning and manipulated the relationship between audio guide tracks and viewed portraits in the galleries of the Tate Britain. By varying the gender …Read more
  •  102
    Sensory Blendings: New Essays on Synaesthesia (edited book)
    Oxford University Press. 2017.
    Synaesthesia is a strange sensory blending: synaesthetes report experiences of colours or tastes associated with particular sounds or words. This volume presents new essays by scientists and philosophers exploring what such cases can tell us about the nature of perception and its boundaries with illusion and imagination.
  •  138
    Spatial Senses: Philosophy of Perception in an Age of Science (edited book)
    with Tony Cheng and Charles Spence
    Routledge. 2019.
    This collection of essays brings together research on sense modalities in general and spatial perception in particular in a systematic and interdisciplinary way. It updates a long-standing philosophical fascination with this topic by incorporating theoretical and empirical research from cognitive science, neuroscience, and psychology. The book is divided thematically to cover a wide range of established and emerging issues. Part I covers notions of objectivity and subjectivity in spatial percept…Read more
  •  132
    Categorising without Concepts
    Review of Philosophy and Psychology 10 (3): 465-478. 2019.
    A strong claim, often found in the literature, is that it is impossible to categorize perceptual properties unless one possesses the related concepts. The evidence from visual perception reviewed in this paper however questions this claim: Concepts, at least canonically defined, are ill-suited to explain perceptual categorisation, which is a fast, and crucially a largely involuntary and unconscious process, which rests on quickly updated probabilistic calculations. I suggest here that perceptual…Read more
  •  73
    We provide a new account of the oft-mentioned special character of touch, showing that its superior reliability is subjective rather than objective : Touch provides higher certainty than vision, for the same level of objective accuracy.
  •  2
  •  122
    How automatic are crossmodal correspondences?
    with Charles Spence
    Consciousness and Cognition 22 (1): 245-260. 2013.
    The last couple of years have seen a rapid growth of interest in the study of crossmodal correspondences – the tendency for our brains to preferentially associate certain features or dimensions of stimuli across the senses. By now, robust empirical evidence supports the existence of numerous crossmodal correspondences, affecting people’s performance across a wide range of psychological tasks – in everything from the redundant target effect paradigm through to studies of the Implicit Association …Read more
  •  66
    The Importance of Being Able
    Croatian Journal of Philosophy 10 (1): 43-61. 2010.
    The paper aims at reconsidering the problem of “practical knowledge” at a proper level of generality, and at showing the role that personal abilities play in it. The notion of “practical knowledge” has for long been the focus of debates both in philosophy and related areas in psychology. It has been wholly captured by debates about ‘knowledge’ and has more recently being challenged in its philosophical foundations as targeting a specific attitude of ‘knowing-how’. But what are the basic facts ac…Read more
  •  74
    Do Our Brains Make Us Utilitarians?
    with Marwa El Zein
    The Philosophers' Magazine 83 87-93. 2018.
  •  127
    Worlds of Truth: A Philosophy of Knowledge
    International Studies in the Philosophy of Science 24 (4): 446-448. 2010.
  •  195
    Fermented thoughts (review)
    The Philosophers' Magazine 48 (48): 104-105. 2010.
  •  1528
    Beyond vision: The vertical integration of sensory substitution devices
    In Dustin Stokes, Mohan Matthen & Stephen Biggs (eds.), , Oxford University Press. 2014.
    What if a blind person could 'see' with her ears? Thanks to Sensory Substitution Devices (SSDs), blind people now have access to out-of-reach objects, a privilege reserved so far for the sighted. In this paper, we show that the philosophical debates have fundamentally been mislead to think that SSDs should be fitted among the existing senses or that they constitute a new sense. Contrary to the existing assumption that they get integrated at the sensory level, we present a new thesis according to…Read more
  •  166
    Aesthetics as Philosophy of Perception, by Bence Nanay
    Mind 126 (502): 635-643. 2017.
    Aesthetics as Philosophy of Perception, by Bence Nanay. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015. Pp. 240.