Fred W. Mast is a full professor of Psychology at the University of Bern in Switzerland,[1] specialized in mental imagery,[2][3] sensorimotor processing,[4] and visual perception.[5] He directs the Cognitive Psychology, Perception, and Research Methods Section[6] at the Department of Psychology of the University of Bern.
Fred Mast is married and has two sons. The family lives in Pully.
Selected publications
Mast, F., Kosslyn, S.M. & Berthoz. A. (1999). Visual mental imagery interferes with allocentric orientation judgements. NeuroReport, 10, 3549–3553.
Mast, F.W., Berthoz, A. & Kosslyn, S.M. (2001). Mental imagery of visual motion modifies the perception of roll vection stimulation. Perception, 30, 945–957.
Mast, F.W. & Kosslyn, S.M. (2002). Eye movements during visual mental imagery. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 6, 271–272.
Mast, F.W. & Kosslyn, S.M. (2002). Visual mental images can be ambiguous: Insights from individual differences in spatial transformation abilities. Cognition, 86, 57–70.
Mast, F.W., Ganis, G., Christie, S. & Kosslyn, S.M. (2003). Four types of visual mental imagery processing in upright and tilted observers. Cognitive Brain Research, 17, 238–247.
Mast, F.W., Newby, N.J. & Young, L.R. (2003). Sensorimotor aspects of high-speed artificial gravity: II. The effect of head position on illusory self-motion. Journal of Vestibular Research, 12, 283–289.
Mast, F.W. & Zaltman, G. (2005). A behavioral window on the mind of the market: An application of the response time paradigm. Brain Research Bulletin, 67, 422–427.
Mast, F.W. (2005). Mental images: Always present, never there. Brain and Behavioral Sciences, 28, 769–770.
Lobmaier, J.S. & Mast, F.W. (2007). The Thatcher illusion: Rotating the viewer instead of the picture. Perception, 36, 537–546.
Lobmaier, J.S. & Mast, F.W. (2008). Perception of novel faces: The parts have it! Perception, 55, 47–53.
Grabherr L., Nicoucar K., Mast F.W. & Merfeld D.M. (2008). Vestibular thresholds for yaw rotation about an earth-vertical axis as a function of frequency. Experimental Brain Research, 186, 677–681.
Lobmaier J.S. & Mast, F.W. (2008) Face imagery is based on featural representations. Experimental Psychology, 55, 47–53.
Lobmaier J.S. Klaver P, Loenneker T, Martin E, & Mast F,.W. (2008). Featural and configural face processing strategies: Evidence from an fMRI study. NeuroReport, 19, 287–291.
Reisen, N., Hoffrage, U. & Mast, F.W. (2008). Identifying decision strategies in a consumer choice situation. Judgment and Decision Making, 4(8), 641–658.
Frick, A., Daum, M., Walser, S. & Mast, F.W. (2009). Motor processes in children's mental rotation. Journal of Cognition and Development. 10, 18–40.
Bombari, D., Mast, F.W. & Lobmaier, J.S. (2009). Featural, configural and holistic face processing strategies evoke different scan patterns. Perception, 38, 1508–1521.
Lobmaier, J.S., Mast, F.W. & Hecht, H. (2010). For the mind's eye the world is two-dimensional. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 17, 36–40.
Lobmaier, J.S., Bölte, J., Mast, F.W. & Dobel, C. (2010). Configural and featural processing in humans with congenital prosopagnosia. Advances in Cognitive Psychology, 6, 23–34.
Wissmath, B., Stricker, D., Weibel, D., Siegenthaler, E. & Mast, F.W. (2010). The illusion of being located in dynamic virtual environments. Can eye movement parameters predict spatial presence ? Journal of Eye Movement Research, 3(5):2, 1–8.
Martarelli, C.S. & Mast, F.W. (2011). Preschool children's eye movements during pictorial recall. British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 29, 425–436.
Weibel, D., Wissmath, B. & Mast, F.W. (2011). The role of cognitive appraisal in media-induced presence and emotions. Cognition and Emotion, 25 (7), 1291–1298.
Grabherr, L., Cuffel, C., Guyot, J.-P. & Mast, F.W. (2011). Mental transformation abilities in patients with unilateral and bilateral vestibular loss. Experimental Brain Research, 209, 205–214.
Wissmath, B., Weibel, D., Schmutz, J. & Mast, F.W. (2011). Being present in more than one place at a time? Patterns of mental self-localization. Consciousness and Cognition, 20, 1808–1815.
Hartmann, M., Falconer, C. & Mast, F.W. (2011). Imagined paralysis impairs embodied spatial transformations. Cognitive Neuroscience, 2, 155–162.
Hartmann, M., Grabherr, L. & Mast, F.W. (2012). Moving along the mental number line: Interactions between whole-body motion and numerical cognition. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 38, 1416-1427
Lopez, C., Bieri, C., Preuss, N. & Mast, F.W. (2012). Tactile and vestibular mechanisms underlying ownership for body parts: a non-visual variant of the rubber hand illusion. Neuroscience Letters, 511, 120–124.
Falconer, C. & Mast, F.W. (2012). Balancing the mind: Vestibular induced facilitation of egocentric mental transformations. Experimental Psychology, 28, 1–8.
Lopez, C., Blanke, O. & Mast, F.W. (2012). The human vestibular cortex revealed by coordinate-based activation likelihood estimation meta-analysis. Journal of Neuroscience, 212, 159–179.
Lopez, C., Schreyer, H.-M., Preuss, N. & Mast, F.W. (2012). Vestibular stimulation modifies the body schema. Neuropsychologia, 50 (8), 1830–1837.
Lobmaier, J.S., Hartmann, M., Volz, A.J. & Mast, F.W. (2012). Emotional expression affects the accuracy of gaze perception. Motivation and Emotion, 8. 573–577.
Tartaglia, E., Bamert, L., Herzog, M. & Mast, F.W. (2012). Perceptual learning of motion discrimination by mental imagery. Journal of Vision, 12(6), 1-10.
Bombari, D., Mora, B., Schaefer, S.C., Mast, F.W. & Lehr, H.-A. (2012). What was I thinking? Eye-tracking experiments underscore the bias that architecture exerts on nuclear grading in prostate cancer, PLoS ONE 7(5): e38023. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0038023
Hartmann, M., Farkas, R. & Mast, F.W. (2012). Self-motion perception influences number processing: Evidence from a parity task. Cognitive Processing, 13, 189–192.
Hartmann, M. & Mast, F.W. (2012). Moving along the mental time line influences the processing of future related words. Consciousness and Cognition, 21, 1558–62.
Mast, F.W., Tartaglia, E. & Herzog, M. (2012). New percepts via mental imagery? Frontiers in Psychology, 3:360. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2012.00360.
Lopez. C., Falconer, C. & Mast, F.W. (2012). Being moved by the self and others: influence of empathy on self-motion perception. PLoS ONE 8(1): e48293. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0048293.
Martarelli, C.S. & Mast, F.W. (2013). Is it real or is it fiction. Children's bias toward reality. Journal of Cognition and Development, 14, 141–153.
Hartmann, M., Furrer, S., Merfeld, D.M., Herzog, M. & Mast, F.W (2013). Self-motion perception training: Thresholds improve in the light but not in the dark, Experimental Brain Research, 226, 231–240.
Golle, J., Lisibach, S., Mast, F.W., & Lobmaier, J.S. (2013). Sweet puppies and cute babies: Perceptual adaptation to babyfacedness transfers across species. PLoS One, 8(3): e58248. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0058248
Bombari, D., Schmid, P.C., Schmid Mast, M., Birri, S., Mast, F.W. & Lobmaier, J.S. (2013). Emotion recognition: The role of featural and configural face information. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 66. 12, 2426-2442 doi: 10.1080/17470218.2013.789065
Preuss, N., Harris, L. & Mast, F.W. (2013). Allocentric visual cues influence mental transformation of bodies. Journal of Vision, 13(12):14, 1-10.
Preuss, N., Hasler, G. & Mast, F.W. (2014). Caloric vestibular stimulation modulates affective control and mood. Brain Stimulation. DOI: 10.1016/j.brs.2013.09.003