AbstractInhibition-of-return is the process by which visual search for an object positioned among others is biased toward novel rather than previously inspected items. It is thought to occur automatically and to increase search efficiency. We examined this phenomenon by studying the facilitative and inhibitory effects of location cueing on target-detection response times in a search task. The results indicated that facilitation was a reflexive consequence of cueing whereas inhibition appeared to depend on cue informativeness. More specifically, the inhibition-of-return effect occurred only when the cue provided no information about the impending target’s location. We suggest that the results are consistent with the notion of two levels of v...
Studies that followed the covert and overt probe-following-search paradigms of Klein (1988) and Klei...
When an observer\u27s visual attention is involuntarily drawn to a particular spatial location by a ...
Mechanisms for selecting distinguishing relevant from irrelevant objects are crucial to our adaptati...
Inhibition-of-return is the process by which visual search for an object positioned among others is ...
AbstractInhibition-of-return is the process by which visual search for an object positioned among ot...
Inhibition of return refers to a bias against returning attention to a location that has been recent...
If attention is brought to a location by a cue and then leaves this location prior to the presentati...
Horowitz and Wolfe (2001) suggested that inhibition of return (IOR) should not be observed in tasks ...
Inhibition of return (IOR) refers to the finding that responses to previously attended locations are...
The ability to search the visual environment in order to locate certain objects is a critical compon...
AbstractStudies that followed the covert and overt probe-following-search paradigms of Klein (1988) ...
While the abrupt onset of a peripheral visual cue usually leads to speeded responses to following ta...
Inhibition of return (IOR) discourages visual attention from returning to previously attended locati...
Inhibition of return (IOR) refers to a mechanism that slows response times (RTs) to detect, localize...
Attention is biased from returning to recently-inspected locations, an effect known as Inhibition of...
Studies that followed the covert and overt probe-following-search paradigms of Klein (1988) and Klei...
When an observer\u27s visual attention is involuntarily drawn to a particular spatial location by a ...
Mechanisms for selecting distinguishing relevant from irrelevant objects are crucial to our adaptati...
Inhibition-of-return is the process by which visual search for an object positioned among others is ...
AbstractInhibition-of-return is the process by which visual search for an object positioned among ot...
Inhibition of return refers to a bias against returning attention to a location that has been recent...
If attention is brought to a location by a cue and then leaves this location prior to the presentati...
Horowitz and Wolfe (2001) suggested that inhibition of return (IOR) should not be observed in tasks ...
Inhibition of return (IOR) refers to the finding that responses to previously attended locations are...
The ability to search the visual environment in order to locate certain objects is a critical compon...
AbstractStudies that followed the covert and overt probe-following-search paradigms of Klein (1988) ...
While the abrupt onset of a peripheral visual cue usually leads to speeded responses to following ta...
Inhibition of return (IOR) discourages visual attention from returning to previously attended locati...
Inhibition of return (IOR) refers to a mechanism that slows response times (RTs) to detect, localize...
Attention is biased from returning to recently-inspected locations, an effect known as Inhibition of...
Studies that followed the covert and overt probe-following-search paradigms of Klein (1988) and Klei...
When an observer\u27s visual attention is involuntarily drawn to a particular spatial location by a ...
Mechanisms for selecting distinguishing relevant from irrelevant objects are crucial to our adaptati...