ECVP 2009 student travel fellowships have now been awarded. The winners were informed by personal emails. The (yet incomplete) list of awardees in alphabetical order is given below.

Deborah Apthorp
University: University of Sydney
Degree Program: PhD
Supervisor: David Alais
Name of project: Motion streaks in human motion perception

Matt Craddock
University: University of Liverpool
Degree Program: PhD
Supervisor: Rebecca Lawson
Name of Project: Comparing visual and haptic object recognition

Dina Devyatko
University: Lomonosov Moscow State University
Degree program: PhD (RFBR Grant #08-06-00171a)
Supervisors: Maria V. Falikman
Name of project: Relationships between the bottom-up and top-down influences upon human visual information processing

Holly Gerhard (OSA-Award)
University: New York University
Degree program: PhD
Supervisors: Laurence T. Maloney
Name of project: Inferred motion perception of light sources in three-dimensional scenes is colorblind

Bronson Harry
University: MARCS Auditory Laboratories
Degree program: PhD
Supervisors: Chris Davis and Jeesun Kim
Name of project: Unattended face perception

Katrin Herrmann
University: New York University
Degree program: PhD Psychology (Cognition and Perception)
Supervisors: Marisa Carrasco and David Heeger
Name of project: Behavioral studies support the normalization model of attention.
Snehlata Jaswal
University: University of Edinburgh
Degree Program: PhD
Supervisors: Robert H. Logie, John M. Henderson, James R. Brockmole
Name of project: Binding of Visual Features in Human Perception and Memory

Bruce Keefe
University: Bangor University
Degree program: PhD
Supervisors: Simon Watt
Name of project: Depth perception and the contribution of depth cues to grasping

Shinobu Kuroki
University: University of Tokyo
Degree program: PhD
Supervisors: Naoki Kawakami and Junji Watanabe
Name of project: Tactile Communication Systems

Graeme Phillipson
University: Edinburgh University
Degree program: PhD
Supervisors: Jenny Read
Name of project: When impossible objects are easier to see: stereo images which are inconsistent with the actual eye position can be easier to detect than those with the correct geometry

Ana Radonjic
University: Rutgers University - Newark
Degree program: PhD
Supervisor: Alan L. Gilchrist
Name of the project: Spatial and photometric factors modulating the
effect of depth on lightness
University of Regensburg