AbstractLow-contrast visual stimuli have been found to produce a memory trace, enhancing subsequent target detection for as much as 16 s. Here we show that the memory trace depends on dynamic interactions between low-level stimulus properties and a higher-level gating process. Detection of vertical targets (Gabor signals) was enhanced by preceding vertical Gabor primes, but suppressed by preceding tilted primes — pointing to a competitive process of dynamic resource allocation. The priming effect was also dependent on a temporal cue, activating a sensory gating process with maximal effect at 300–500 ms delay. The results suggest a two-step process in which attention affects transition between perception and memory: a non-selective gating pr...
Cueing attention after the disappearance of visual stimuli biases which items will be remembered bes...
Using visual displays consisting of single items to be stored in visual short-term memory (VSTM), Ja...
Cueing a target by abrupt visual stimuli enhances its perception in a rapid but short-lived fashion,...
AbstractLow-contrast visual stimuli have been found to produce a memory trace, enhancing subsequent ...
Despite our visual system receiving irrelevant input that competes with task-relevant signals, we ar...
The richness of sensory input dictates that the brain must prioritize and select information for fur...
Visual short-term memory (VSTM) load leads to impaired perception during maintenance. Here, we fitte...
AbstractWe investigated the mechanisms underlying the effects of sustained and transient covert atte...
There are multiple ways in which working memory can influence selective attention. Aside from the co...
AbstractWe direct our attention to those visual stimuli that are relevant to our behavioral goals. S...
Visual search is speeded when the target is repeated from trial to trial compared to when it changes...
Inhibition of return (IOR)—a slow response to targets at recently attended locations, is believed to...
We direct our attention to those visual stimuli that are relevant to our behavioral goals. Some of t...
Cueing attention after the disappearance of visual stimuli biases which items will be remembered bes...
Cueing attention after the disappearance of visual stimuli biases which items will be remembered bes...
Cueing attention after the disappearance of visual stimuli biases which items will be remembered bes...
Using visual displays consisting of single items to be stored in visual short-term memory (VSTM), Ja...
Cueing a target by abrupt visual stimuli enhances its perception in a rapid but short-lived fashion,...
AbstractLow-contrast visual stimuli have been found to produce a memory trace, enhancing subsequent ...
Despite our visual system receiving irrelevant input that competes with task-relevant signals, we ar...
The richness of sensory input dictates that the brain must prioritize and select information for fur...
Visual short-term memory (VSTM) load leads to impaired perception during maintenance. Here, we fitte...
AbstractWe investigated the mechanisms underlying the effects of sustained and transient covert atte...
There are multiple ways in which working memory can influence selective attention. Aside from the co...
AbstractWe direct our attention to those visual stimuli that are relevant to our behavioral goals. S...
Visual search is speeded when the target is repeated from trial to trial compared to when it changes...
Inhibition of return (IOR)—a slow response to targets at recently attended locations, is believed to...
We direct our attention to those visual stimuli that are relevant to our behavioral goals. Some of t...
Cueing attention after the disappearance of visual stimuli biases which items will be remembered bes...
Cueing attention after the disappearance of visual stimuli biases which items will be remembered bes...
Cueing attention after the disappearance of visual stimuli biases which items will be remembered bes...
Using visual displays consisting of single items to be stored in visual short-term memory (VSTM), Ja...
Cueing a target by abrupt visual stimuli enhances its perception in a rapid but short-lived fashion,...