Neurologically intact individuals show a spatial processing bias in perception tasks, specifically showing a bias towards the left in bisecting lines. We present evidence for a novel finding that a leftwards bias occurs in short-term memory for recently presented arbitrary bindings of visual features. Three experiments are reported, two of which involve a total of over 60,000 participants with a small number of trials for each. Experiment 3 involved a larger number of trials for each of 144 participants. Participants reproduced from immediate memory arrays of shape-colour-location bindings. In all three experiments, significantly more errors were observed in reproduction of items presented on the right of the array than on the left. Results...
Asymmetry in human spatial attention has long been documented. In the general population the majorit...
Visual short-term memory (VSTM) is an essential store that creates continuous representations from d...
Neurologically normal individuals show a leftward spatial bias and tend to collide with objects on t...
We report evidence of a new phenomenon from three experiments: a leftward bias when people try to re...
Neurologically healthy individuals misbisect their visual space by erring towards the left. This mis...
The phenomenon of visuospatial pseudoneglect proposes that perception can be biased towards the left...
Given a single fixation, memory for scenes containing salient objects near both the left and right v...
For the first time, we report a spatial bias in visual short-term memory (VSTM) after left medial an...
For the first time, we report a spatial bias in visual short-term memory (VSTM) after left medial an...
Neurologically normal individuals exhibit leftward spatial biases, resulting from object- and space-...
AbstractA bias for humans to attend to the left side of space has been reported in a variety of expe...
Systematic biases in spatial attention are a common finding. In the general population, a systematic...
It has been recently shown that individuals demonstrate a leftward bias when recalling visual inform...
Asymmetry in human spatial attention has long been documented. In the general population the majorit...
Systematic biases in spatial attention are a common finding. In the general population, a systematic...
Asymmetry in human spatial attention has long been documented. In the general population the majorit...
Visual short-term memory (VSTM) is an essential store that creates continuous representations from d...
Neurologically normal individuals show a leftward spatial bias and tend to collide with objects on t...
We report evidence of a new phenomenon from three experiments: a leftward bias when people try to re...
Neurologically healthy individuals misbisect their visual space by erring towards the left. This mis...
The phenomenon of visuospatial pseudoneglect proposes that perception can be biased towards the left...
Given a single fixation, memory for scenes containing salient objects near both the left and right v...
For the first time, we report a spatial bias in visual short-term memory (VSTM) after left medial an...
For the first time, we report a spatial bias in visual short-term memory (VSTM) after left medial an...
Neurologically normal individuals exhibit leftward spatial biases, resulting from object- and space-...
AbstractA bias for humans to attend to the left side of space has been reported in a variety of expe...
Systematic biases in spatial attention are a common finding. In the general population, a systematic...
It has been recently shown that individuals demonstrate a leftward bias when recalling visual inform...
Asymmetry in human spatial attention has long been documented. In the general population the majorit...
Systematic biases in spatial attention are a common finding. In the general population, a systematic...
Asymmetry in human spatial attention has long been documented. In the general population the majorit...
Visual short-term memory (VSTM) is an essential store that creates continuous representations from d...
Neurologically normal individuals show a leftward spatial bias and tend to collide with objects on t...