Damasse J.-B., Perrinet L.U., Madelain L., and Montagnini A. (2018). Reinforcement effects in anticipatory smooth eye movements. Journal of Vision, 18: 14.
Landelle C., Montagnini A., Madelain L., and Danion F. (2016). Eye tracking a self-moved target with complex hand-target dynamics. Journal of Neurophysiology, 116: 1859-1870.
Ledberg A., Montagnini A., Coppola R., and Bressler S.L. (2012). Reduced Variability of Ongoing and Evoked Cortical Activity Leads to Improved Behavioral Performance. PLoS ONE, 7.
Meso A.I., Montagnini A., Bell J., and Masson G.S. (2016). Looking for symmetry: fixational eye movements are biased by image mirror symmetry. Journal of Neurophysiology, 116: 1250-1260.
Montagnini A. and Chelazzi L. (2009). Dynamic interaction between “Go” and “Stop” signals in the saccadic eye movement system: New evidence against the functional independence of the underlying neural mechanisms. Vision Research, 49: 1316-1328.
Montagnini A., Perrinet L.U., and Masson G.S. (2015). Visual Motion Processing and Human Tracking Behavior. Biologically Inspired Computer Vision, 267-294.
Servant M., Montagnini A., and Burle B. (2014). Conflict tasks and the diffusion framework: Insight in model constraints based on psychological laws. Cognitive Psychology, 72: 162-195.
Servant M., White C., Montagnini A., and Burle B. (2016). Linking Theoretical Decision-making Mechanisms in the Simon Task with Electrophysiological Data: A Model-based Neuroscience Study in Humans. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 28: 1501-1521.
Simoncini C., Perrinet L.U., Montagnini A., Mamassian P., and Masson G.S. (2012). More is not always better: adaptive gain control explains dissociation between perception and action. Nature Neuroscience, 15: 1596-1603.
Spering M. and Montagnini A. (2011). Do we track what we see? Common versus independent processing for motion perception and smooth pursuit eye movements: a review. Vision Research, 51: 836-852.
Spotorno S., Masson G.S., and Montagnini A. (2016). Fixational saccades during grating detection and discrimination. Vision Research, 118: 105-118.