Although inhibition of return (IOR) is widely believed to aid search by discouraging reexamination of previously inspected locations, its impact actually appears to decline as the number of target locations increases. We test three possible reasons for this paradoxical result: (1) IOR is capacity-limited, (2) IOR is sensitive to subtle changes in target location probability, and (3) IOR decays with distance from a previously attended location. The present investigation provides strong support for the third explanation, indicating that a gradient of inhibition is centered on previously attended locations. We note that this inhibitory gradient resolves a paradox in the literature. Moreover, we speculate that the inhibitory gradient may reflec...
Studies that followed the covert and overt probe-following-search paradigms of Klein (1988) and Klei...
Inhibition of return (IOR) refers to the finding that responses to previously attended locations are...
Inhibition of return (IOR) refers to an orienting mechanism that biases attention against returning ...
Inhibition of return refers to a bias against returning attention to a location that has been recent...
ABSTRACT—An object hidden among distractors can be found more efficiently if previously searched loc...
If attention is brought to a location by a cue and then leaves this location prior to the presentati...
An inhibitory after-effect of attention, frequently referred to as inhibition of return (IOR), opera...
Inhibition of return (IOR) refers to a mechanism that slows response times (RTs) to detect, localize...
Inhibition of return (IOR) commonly refers to the effect of prolonged response times to targets at p...
Mechanisms for selecting distinguishing relevant from irrelevant objects are crucial to our adaptati...
Horowitz and Wolfe (2001) suggested that inhibition of return (IOR) should not be observed in tasks ...
Studies that followed the covert and overt probe-following-search paradigms of Klein (1988) and Klei...
AbstractInhibition-of-return is the process by which visual search for an object positioned among ot...
Inhibition-of-return is the process by which visual search for an object positioned among others is ...
AbstractStudies that followed the covert and overt probe-following-search paradigms of Klein (1988) ...
Studies that followed the covert and overt probe-following-search paradigms of Klein (1988) and Klei...
Inhibition of return (IOR) refers to the finding that responses to previously attended locations are...
Inhibition of return (IOR) refers to an orienting mechanism that biases attention against returning ...
Inhibition of return refers to a bias against returning attention to a location that has been recent...
ABSTRACT—An object hidden among distractors can be found more efficiently if previously searched loc...
If attention is brought to a location by a cue and then leaves this location prior to the presentati...
An inhibitory after-effect of attention, frequently referred to as inhibition of return (IOR), opera...
Inhibition of return (IOR) refers to a mechanism that slows response times (RTs) to detect, localize...
Inhibition of return (IOR) commonly refers to the effect of prolonged response times to targets at p...
Mechanisms for selecting distinguishing relevant from irrelevant objects are crucial to our adaptati...
Horowitz and Wolfe (2001) suggested that inhibition of return (IOR) should not be observed in tasks ...
Studies that followed the covert and overt probe-following-search paradigms of Klein (1988) and Klei...
AbstractInhibition-of-return is the process by which visual search for an object positioned among ot...
Inhibition-of-return is the process by which visual search for an object positioned among others is ...
AbstractStudies that followed the covert and overt probe-following-search paradigms of Klein (1988) ...
Studies that followed the covert and overt probe-following-search paradigms of Klein (1988) and Klei...
Inhibition of return (IOR) refers to the finding that responses to previously attended locations are...
Inhibition of return (IOR) refers to an orienting mechanism that biases attention against returning ...