Preface<br>Christina J. Howard<br>1. Oculomotor measures reveal the temporal dynamics of preparing for search<br>Katya Olmos-Solis, Anouk M. van Loon, Sander A. Los and Christian N.L. Olivers<br>2. Attention in action and perception: Unitary or separate mechanisms of selectivity?<br>James T. Enns, Allison A. Brennan and Robert L. Whitwell<br>3. Perceptual episodes, temporal attention, and the role of cognitive control: Lessons from the attentional blink<br>Guy Snir and Yaffa Yeshurun<br>4. Accumulating visual information for action<br>Eli Brenner and Jeroen B.J. Smeets<br>5. Learning features in complex and changing environment: A distribution-based framework for visual attention and vision in general<br>Andrey Chetverikov, Gianluca Campana and Árni Kristjánsson<br>6. Fundamental computational constraints on the time course of perception and action<br>Shimon Edelman and Roy Moyal<br>7. Selecting multiple features delays perception, but only when targets are horizontally arranged<br>Shih-Yu Lo<br>8. The maintenance and updating of representations of no longer visible objects and their parts<br>J.D. McCarthy, Gennady Erlikhman and Gideon P. Caplovitz<br>9. Choosing the speed of dynamic mental simulations<br>Alexis D.J. Makin<br>10. Behavioral oscillation in face priming: Prediction about face identity is updated at a theta-band rhythm<br>Yuanye Wang and Huan Luo<br>11. Incorporation of prosthetic limbs into the body representation of amputees: Evidence from the crossed hands temporal order illusion<br>Yuki Sato, Toshihiro Kawase, Kouji Takano, Charles Spence and Kenji Kansaku<br>12. Synchronizing the tracking eye movements with the motion of a visual target: Basic neural processes<br>L. Goffart, C. Bourrelly and J. Quinet<br>13. The importance of timing, at the cortical level, in object representation updating to predict changes in the environment<br>Naomi du Bois and Mark A. Elliott<br>14. Effect of emotions on temporal attention<br>Maruti V. Mishra, Sonia B. Ray and Narayanan Srinivasan