Contact Information
- Dr. Stefanie Drew
- Office Location: ST 325
- Office Phone: (818) 677-3503
- Email: stefanie.drew@csun.edu
- Website: http://www.csun.edu/~sdrew
Education
Ph.D. University of California, Irvine
M.A. University of California, Irvine
B.A. Claremont McKenna College
Specialty Areas: Cognitive Psychology
Courses Taught
PSY 369 - Applied Cognition
PSY 321 - Research Methods
Selected Publications and Presentations
Publications
Drew, SA, Borsting, E, Stark, LR and Chase, C. (2012) Chromatic aberration, accommodation and color preferences in asthenopia. Optometry and Vision Science.
Drew, SA, Chubb, C. and Sperling, G. (Under Revision) The plasticity of contrast-selective attention filters achievable for centroid extraction. Journal of Vision.
Drew, SA, Chubb, CF, and Sperling, G. (2010) Precise attention filters for Weber contrast derived from centroid estimations. Journal of Vision. 10(10): 20
Presentations
Drew, SA, Escobar, AE and Chase, C. (2012) “Accommodative Lag is Not Predictive of Diminished Reading Speeds in Natural Settings” Vision Science Society Meeting, Naples, Florida
Drew, SA, Asher, DE, Barton, B and Brewer, AA (2010) “Pinwheel cartography: New visual field map cluster in the human posterior parahippocampal complex” Society for Neuroscience Meeting, San Diego
Drew, SA, Chubb, CF and Sperling, G. (2009) “Quantifying Attention: Attention filtering in centroid estimations” Vision Science Society Meeting, Florida
Drew, SA, Chubb, CF, Ehrlich, T, Rubin, T and Sperling, G. (2008) Binary versus graded filters for selectively attending to dots of different contrasts. Vision Science Annual Meeting, Florida
Wong-Drew, SA, Chubb, CF and Sperling, G. (2006) Attentional filtering of dot intensities in centroid estimations. Vision Science Society Annual Meeting, Florida
Research and Interests
Visual Attention
This work focuses on examining how visual attention filters can be imposed and modified during perception tasks. This includes modeling how attention is allocated to items in the visual field.
Accommodation, Color and Reading
When we perform close work, such as reading a text message, the lens in our eye thickens in a process called accommodation to allow us to maintain focus on our target. This research investigates accommodative function and variations during reading behavior. Additionally, I am interested in empirically examining the relationship between colored light and accommodative function.
Synesthesia
Synesthesia is a fascinating condition in which individuals experience either intermodal (for example chicken tastes pointy) or intramodal (for example seeing colors when viewing black-and-white text sensory perceptions). The condition of seeing colors when viewing text is a condition known as grapheme-color synesthesia, and is one of my research interests. I am interested in looking at the role that attention has on affecting these perceptions.

