Bonneh Yoram

Associate Professor
Microbiology and Virology
Bar Ilan University
Israel

Academician Microbiology
Biography

Dr. Bonneh Yoram is affiliated to the department of Microbiology and Virology, Bar Ilan University, where Dr. Bonneh Yoram is currently working as Associate Professor. Dr. Bonneh Yoram has authored and co-authored several national and international publications and also working as a reviewer for reputed professional journals. Dr. Bonneh Yoram is having an active association with different societies and academies around the world. Dr. Bonneh Yoram made his mark in the scientific community with the contributions and widely recognition from honourable subject experts around the world. Dr. Bonneh Yoram has received several awards for the contributions to the scientific community. Dr. Bonneh Yoram major research interest involves Autism (perception, attention, speech), Incoluntary eye movements (microsaccades, drift, eye blinks), Behavioral disorders and their rehabilitation using "neural retraining" techniques.Amblyopia, Neglect, Dyslexia, Aging, Sensory disturbances in autism and SMD, Perceptual awareness: Visual Disappearance, Binocular rivalry, Motion induced blindness, Visual spatial integration, Contrast detection and discrimination, Visual evoked potentials..

Research Intrest

Autism (perception, attention, speech), Incoluntary eye movements (microsaccades, drift, eye blinks), Behavioral disorders and their rehabilitation using "neural retraining" techniques.Amblyopia, Neglect, Dyslexia, Aging, Sensory disturbances in autism and SMD, Perceptual awareness: Visual Disappearance, Binocular rivalry, Motion induced blindness, Visual spatial integration, Contrast detection and discrimination, Visual evoked potentials.

List of Publications
Meital-Kfir N, Bonneh YS, Sagi D, Asymmetric visual interactions across the boundary of awareness, Journal of Vision, 2016; 1;16(10):4
Harris H, Israeli D, Minshew N, Bonneh Y, Heeger DJ, Behrmann M, Sagi D, Response: Commentary: Perceptual learning in autism: over-specificity and possible remedies, Front Integr Neurosci. 2016 Nov 9;10:36.
Bonneh YS, Adini Y, Polat U, Contrast sensitivity revealed by spontaneous eyeblinks: Evidence for a common mechanism of oculomotor inhibition, Journal of Vision, 2016; 16(7):1.