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1
Incentive value and spatial certainty combine additively to determine visual priorities
Garner, K.G.; Bowman, H.; Raymond, J.E.. - : Springer, 2020
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2
Training attenuates the influence of sensory uncertainty on confidence estimation
Hall, Michelle G.; Dux, Paul E.. - : Springer New York LLC, 2020
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3
More than smell - COVID-19 is associated with severe impairment of smell, taste, and chemesthesis
Parma, Valentina; Ohla, Kathrin; Veldhuizen, Maria G.. - : Oxford University Press, 2020
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4
Redundancy gain in visual search of simulated X-ray images
Hebert, Claudia R.; Sha, Li Z.; Remington, Roger W.. - : Springer New York LLC, 2020
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5
Mechanisms of contextual cueing: A tutorial review
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6
Conjunction search: can we simultaneously bias attention to features and relations?
Becker, Stefanie I.; Atalla, Marina; Folk, Charles L.. - : Springer New York, 2019
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7
Voluntary control of illusory contour formation
Harrison, William J.; Rideaux, Reuben. - : Springer, 2019
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8
Lightness/pitch and elevation/pitch crossmodal correspondences are low-level sensory effects
Zeljko, Mick; Kritikos, Ada; Grove, Philip M.. - : Springer New York, 2019
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9
Biological motion and animacy belief induce similar effects on involuntary shifts of attention
Chandler-Mather, Ned; Welsh, Timothy; Sparks, Samuel. - : Springer New York LLC, 2019
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10
Neural correlates of goal-directed enhancement and suppression of visual stimuli in the absence of conscious perception (vol 81, pg 1346, 2019)
Travis, Susan L.; Dux, Paul E.; Mattingley, Jason B.. - : Springer New York, 2019
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11
Dwelling on simple stimuli in visual search
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12
Predictable events elicit less visual and temporal information uptake in an oddball paradigm
Saurels, Blake W.; Lipp, Ottmar V.; Yarrow, Kielan. - : Springer New York LLC, 2019
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13
Taking a closer look at visual search: just how feature-agnostic is singleton detection mode?
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14
Language-General Auditory-Visual Speech Perception: Thai-English and Japanese-English McGurk Effects
Burnham, Denis; Dodd, Barbara. - : Brill, 2018
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15
The curious case of spillover: does it tell us much about saccade timing in reading?
Remington, Roger W.; Burt, Jennifer S.; Becker, Stefanie I.. - : Springer New York LLC, 2018
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16
The optimal experimental design for multiple alternatives perceptual search
Finlayson, Nonie J.; Manser-Smith, Kelda; Balraj, Annika. - : Springer New York, 2018
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17
Cognitive load effects on early visual perceptual processing
Liu, Ping; Forte, Jason; Sewell, David. - : Springer New York, 2018
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18
Neural correlates of goal-directed enhancement and suppression of visual stimuli in the absence of conscious perception
Travis, Susan L.; Dux, Paul E.; Mattingley, Jason B.. - : Springer New York LLC, 2018
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19
From eyes to hands: Transfer of learning in the Simon task across motor effectors
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20
Short-term and long-term attentional biases to frequently encountered target features
Sha, Li Z.; Remington, Roger W.; Jiang, Yuhong V.. - : Springer New York LLC, 2017
Abstract: It has long been known that frequently occurring targets are attended better than infrequent ones in visual search. But does this frequency-based attentional prioritization reflect momentary or durable changes in attention? Here we observed both short-term and long-term attentional biases for visual features as a function of different types of statistical associations between the targets, distractors, and features. Participants searched for a target, a line oriented horizontally or vertically among diagonal distractors, and reported its length. In one set of experiments we manipulated the target’s color probability: Targets were more often in Color 1 than in Color 2. The distractors were in other colors. Participants found Color 1 targets more quickly than Color 2 targets, but this preference disappeared immediately when the target’s color became random in the subsequent testing phase. In the other set of experiments, we manipulated the diagnostic values of the two colors: Color 1 was more often a target than a distractor; Color 2 was more often a distractor than a target. Participants found Color 1 targets more quickly than Color 2 targets. Importantly, and in contrast to the first set of experiments, the featural preference was sustained in the testing phase. These results suggest that short-term and long-term attentional biases are products of different statistical information. Finding a target momentarily activates its features, inducing short-term repetition priming. Long-term changes in attention, on the other hand, may rely on learning diagnostic features of the targets.
Keyword: 1203 Language and Linguistics; 2809 Sensory Systems; 3205 Experimental and Cognitive Psychology; 3310 Linguistics and Language; Diagnostic features; Selective attention; Statistical learning; Target’s frequency effect; Visual search
URL: https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:582900
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