ֲýƵ

Skip navigation

Dr Valerie Benson

Associate Professor

School: Psychology

I began my academic career at the University of Durham, UK where I was awarded my PhD in Psychology (2004), having been supervised by one of the instrumental figures in eye movement research in the UK, Prof John Findlay. I subsequently worked as a Research Fellow with one of the central figures in vision, Prof David Milner. In 2006 I was awarded a prestigious Roberts Research Fellowship, and relocated to the University of Southampton, UK where I spent the next five years developing an independent research profile, specialising in investigating eye movements in typical and atypical populations. In 2011 I became a Lecturer in Psychology, and I was promoted to a Senior Lecturer in 2011. In 2018 I relocated back to the North of England to take up a part-time Senior Lectureship in Atypical Cognition at the University of Central Lancashire (UCLan). I was promoted to Reader in 2022, and in November 2025 I moved to ֲýƵ to take up a PT Associate Professorship in Experimental Psychology.

Valerie Benson

My research investigates how patterns of eye movements can reveal on-line cognitive processing differences for a range of tasks and with a range of populations. The aim is to show how processing differences might contribute to the observed behavioural characteristics of atypical populations, and the findings are used to develop theoretical accounts as to how cognition drives or underpins aspects of behaviour in specific groups. I am currently leading National, European and International collaborative projects to examine various aspects of cognition in the deaf; in autism; in anxiety; in stroke patients and in older adults.

In everyday life the default strategy to sample the visual environment is to move our eyes in fast ballistic movements (saccades) interspersed with periods where the eye remains still (fixations). This is known as saccadic orienting, and its purpose is to re-position the high acuity area of the retina, the fovea, so that detailed inspection can be carried out at the point of fixation. Information is processed in detail during fixations.  Where and when the eyes move for given tasks are tightly linked to on-line cognitive processing, and patterns of eye movements have the potential to reveal processing differences that might account for behavioural effects observed for various special or atypical populations. Eye movement methodology enables me to investigate on-line cognitive processing differences, for a range of tasks, with a range of participant populations.


Latest News and Features

AI mapping tool
THE Rankings
The North Edit
Professor Howard Reed from ֲýƵ, Irene Campbell MP, Chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Phasing Out Animal Experiments in Medical Research, and Professor Elliott Johnson from ֲýƵ.
three man standing in front of a wind tunnel holding prototype parts of a wind turbine blade
More news
More events

Upcoming events

REVEAL Architecture
-
REVEAL Interior Design
-
REVEAL Fashion Exhibition
-
Back to top