Publications

2024

Riemer, M., & Cai, G. Z. (2024). Space-time interference: The asymmetry we get out is the asymmetry we put in. Neurosci Biobehav Rev, 167: 105941 [link]

Bogon, J., Jagorska, C., Steinecker, I., & Riemer, M. (2024). Age-related changes in time perception: Effects of immersive virtual reality and spatial location of stimuliActa Psychol, 249: 104460 [link]

Riemer, M., Wolbers, T., & van Rijn, H. (2024). Memory traces of duration and location in the right intraparietal sulcus. NeuroImage, 297: 120706 [link]

Jagorska, C., & Riemer, M. (2024). The influence of travel time on perceived traveled distance varies by spatiotemporal scale. Exp Brain Res, 242: 2023-2031. [link]

Mioni, G., Wolbers, T., & Riemer, M. (2024). Differences between sub-second and supra-second durations for the assessment of timing deficits in amnestic mild cognitive impairment. Aging Brain, 6: 100120 [link]

Bogon, J., Högerl, J., Kocur, M., Wolff, C., Henze, N., & Riemer, M. (2024). Validating virtual reality for time perception research: Virtual reality changes expectations about the duration of physical processes, but not the sense of time. Behav Res Methods, 56: 4553-4562. [link]

Rhodes, D., Bridgewater, T., Ayache, J., & Riemer, M. (2024). Rapid calibration to dynamic temporal contextsQ J Exp Psychol, 77(9): 1923-1935. [link]


2023

Riemer, M. (2023). Interval timing in virtual reality: Merits, goals, and premises. Mensch und Computer 2023 – Workshopband. DOI: 10.18420/muc2023-mci-ws05-433. GI. MCI-WS05: Time and Timing in Human-Computer Interaction. Rapperswil. 3.-6. September 2023 [link]

Bublatzky, F., Allen, P., & Riemer, M. (2023). Spatial navigation under threat: Aversive apprehensions improve route retracing in higher versus lower trait anxious individuals. Front Psychol, 14: 1166594. [link]

Seizova-Cajić, T., Zopf, R.Riemer, M., & Fuchs, X. (2023). Somatosensory illusions. In: Somatosensory Research Methods (Ed. Holmes, N. P.) Springer: New York: 267-285. [link]


2022

Riemer, M., Achtzehn, J., Kuehn, E., & Wolbers, T. (2022). Cross-dimensional interference between time and distance during spatial navigation is mediated by speed representations in intraparietal sulcus and area hMT+. NeuroImage, 257: 119336. [link]

Riemer, M., Vieweg, P., van Rijn, H., & Wolbers, T. (2022). Reducing the tendency for chronometric counting in duration discrimination tasks. Atten Percept Psychophys, 84: 2641-2654. [link]

Maaß, S. C., Wolbers, T., van Rijn, H., Riemer, M. (2022). Temporal context effects are associated with cognitive status in advanced age. Psychol Res, 86: 512-521. [link]


2021

Riemer, M., Wolbers, T., & van Rijn, H. (2021). Age-related changes in time perception: The impact of naturalistic environments and retrospective judgements on timing performance. Q J Exp Psychol, 74(11): 2002-2012. [link]


2020

Riemer, M., & Wolbers, T. (2020). Negative errors in time reproduction tasks. Psychol Res, 84: 168-176. [link]

Riemer, M. (2020). Physical time, perceived time, and their interrelation. De Physicus, 31 (3): 5-7. [link]

Stangl, M., Kanitscheider, I., Riemer, M., Fiete, I., & Wolbers, T. (2020). Sources of path integration error in young and aging humans. Nature Communications, 11: 2626. [link]

Stahn, A. C., Riemer, M., Wolbers, T., Werner, A., Brauns, K., Besnard, S., Denise, P., Kühn, S., & Gunga, H.-C. (2020). Spatial updating depends on gravity. Frontiers in Neural Circuits, 14: 20. [link]

Dordevic, M., Taubert, M., Müller, P., Riemer, M., Kaufmann, J., Hökelmann, A., & Müller, N.G. (2020). Which effects on neuroanatomy and path-integration survive? Results of a randomized controlled study on intensive balance training. Brain Sciences, 10: 210. [link]


2019

Riemer, M., Trojan, J., Beauchamp, M., & Fuchs, X. (2019). The rubber hand universe: On the impact of methodological differences in the rubber hand illusion. Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews 104: 268-280. [link]

Riemer, M., Kubik, V., & Wolbers, T. (2019). The effect of feedback on temporal error monitoring and timing behavior. Behavioural Brain Research 369: 111929. [link]

Riemer, M., Wolbers, T., & Kuehn, E. (2019). Preserved multisensory body representations in advanced age. Scientific Reports 9: 2663. [link]

Bublatzky, F., Riemer, M. & Guerra, P. (2019). Reversing threat to safety: Incongruence of facial emotions and instructed threat modulates conscious perception but not physiological responding. Frontiers in Psychology, 10: 2091. [link]

Maaß, S. C., Riemer, M., Wolbers, T., van Rijn, H. (2019). Timing deficiencies in amnestic mild cognitive impairment: Disentangling clock and memory processes. Behavioural Brain Research 373: 112110. [link]

Merhav, M., Riemer, M., & Wolbers, T. (2019). Spatial updating deficits in human aging are associated with traces of former memory representations. Neurobiology of Aging, 76: 53-61. [link]

Vieweg, P., Riemer, M., Berron, D., & Wolbers, T. (2019). Memory Image Completion (MIC): Establishing a task to behaviorally assess pattern completion in humans.


2018

Riemer, M., Shine, J.P., & Wolbers, T. (2018). On the (a)symmetry between the perception of time and space in large-scale environments. Hippocampus, 28: 539-548. [link]

Müller, N. G., Riemer, M., Brandt, L., & Wolbers, T. (2018). Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation reveals a causal role of the human precuneus in spatial updating. Scientific Reports, 8(1): 10171. [link]

Kuehn, E., Perez-Lopez, M.B., Diersch, N., Döhler, J., Wolbers, T., & Riemer, M. (2018). Embodiment in the aging mind. Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews, 86: 207-225. [link]

Riemer, M. (2018). Delusions of control in schizophrenia: Resistant to the mind’s best trick? Schizophrenia Research, 197: 98-103. [link]

Riemer, M. (2018). Post Mortem (A novel). Berlin: Periplaneta


2016

Riemer, M., Diersch, N., Bublatzky, F., & Wolbers, T. (2016). Space, time, and numbers in the right posterior parietal cortex: Differences between response code associations and congruency effects. NeuroImage, 129: 72-79. [link]

Fuchs, X., Riemer, M., Diers, M., Flor, H., & Trojan, J. (2016). Perceptual drifts of real and artificial limbs in the rubber hand illusion. Scientific Reports, 6: 24362. [link]

Riemer, M., Rhodes, D., & Wolbers, T. (2016). Systematic underreproduction of time is independent of judgment certainty. Neural Plasticity (Article ID: 6890674): 1-8. [link]


2015

Riemer, M. (2015). Psychophysics and the anisotropy of time. Consciousness & Cognition, 38: 191-197. [link]

Riemer, M., Bublatzky, F., Trojan, J., & Alpers, G. W. (2015). Defensive activation during the rubber hand illusion: Ownership versus proprioceptive drift. Biological Psychology, 109: 86-92. [link]


2014

Riemer, M., Fuchs, X., Bublatzky, F., Kleinböhl, D., Hölzl, R., & Trojan, J. (2014). The rubber hand illusion depends on a congruent mapping between real and artificial fingers. Acta Psychologica, 152: 34-41. [link]

Bublatzky, F., Gerdes, A. B. M., White, A. J., Riemer, M. & Alpers, G. W. (2014). Social and emotional relevance in face processing: Happy faces of future interaction partners enhance the LPP. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 8: 493. [link]

Riemer, M., Hölzl, R., & Kleinböhl, D. (2014). Interrelations between the perception of time and space in large-scale environments. Experimental Brain Research, 232: 1317-1325. [link]


2013

Riemer, M., Kleinböhl, D., Hölzl, R., & Trojan, J. (2013). Action and perception in the rubber hand illusion. Experimental Brain Research, 229: 383-393. [link]

Riemer, M. (2013). Dynamic representations of the body in space. PhD Thesis, Otto Selz Institute for Applied Psychology, University of Mannheim. [link]


2012

Riemer, M., Trojan, J., Kleinböhl, D., & Hölzl, R. (2012). A ’view from nowhen’ on time perception experiments. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance 38 (5): 1118-1124. [link]


2010

Riemer, M., Trojan, J., Kleinböhl, D., & Hölzl, R. (2010). Body posture affects tactile discrimination and identification of fingers and hands. Experimental Brain Research, 206(1): 47-57. [link]


2009

Riemer, M. (2009). Postural influences on tactile discrimination and identification of fingers and hands. Diploma Thesis, Otto Selz Institute for Applied Psychology, University of Mannheim.