Halit Dori PhD

I have two psychology degrees, one in cognitive psychology and the other in developmental psychology.

My Ph.D. was on endogenous visual spatial attention and my current main research interest is cognitive-developmental neuroscience.

During the last few years I worked with computer-lab techniques and fMRI techniques.

Nowadays I'm starting clinical research on auditory spatial attention in PDD children.

Beside my research interests, I also work as a developmental psychologist in Ichilov Medical Center in Tel-Aviv, have a private practice and do BRC tests for children with ADHD at Ichilov Medical Center.

email: halit.dori@gmail.com

Recent Publications

  • Dori, H., & Henik, A. (1997). Attention and Parkinson&apos s disease: A review, Psychologia, 6, 67-82.
  • Naveh-Benjamin, M., Craik, F. I., Guez, J., & Dori, H. (1998). Effects of divided attention on encoding and retrieval processes in human memory: Further support for an asymmetry. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning Memory and Cognition, 24, 1091-104.
  • Berger, A., Dori, H., & Henik, A. (1999). Peripheral non-informative cues induce early facilitation of target detection. The European Journal of Cognitive Psychology, 11, 119-137.
  • Cohen Kadosh, R., Henik, A., Rubinsten, O., Dori, H., Bloch-David, Y., Mohr, H., Van de Ven, V., Zorzi, M., Hendler, T., & Linden, D. (2005). Are numbers special? The comparison systems of the human brain investigated by fMRI. Neuropsychologia, 43, 1238-1248.
  • Dori, H., & Henik A. (2006). Indications for two attentional gradients in endogenous visual-spatial attention. Visual-cognition, 13, 166-201.
  • Dori, H. & Henik A. (in preperation). Cue Modality Affects Inhibition.