Dimension-based accounts of visual search and selection have significantly contributed to the understanding of the cognitive mechanisms of attention. Extensions of the original approach assuming the existence of dimension-based feature contrast saliency signals that govern the allocation of focal attention have recently been employed to explain the spatial and temporal dynamics of the relative strengths of saliency representations. Here we review behavioral and neurophysiological findings providing evidence for the dynamic trial-by-trial weighting of feature dimensions in a variety of visual search tasks. The examination of the effects of feature and dimension-based inter-trial transitions in feature detection tasks shows that search perfor...
To dissociate feature-based and object-based stages in the control of spatial attention during visua...
AbstractVisual search for an odd-one-out target is speeded when observers are provided with a cue wo...
Becker SI, Grubert A, Horstmann G, Ansorge U. Which processes dominate visual search: Bottom-up feat...
Dimension-based accounts of visual search and selection have significantly contributed to the unders...
The notion that the neural activations representing a limited set of visual features in the brain ar...
Objects that stand out from the environment tend to be of behavioral relevance, and the visual syste...
Two experiments compared reaction times (RTs) in visual search for singleton feature targets defined...
In cross-dimensional visual search tasks, target discrimination is faster when the previous trial co...
Two experiments investigated dimension-based attentional processing in a complex singleton conjuncti...
A fundamental task for the visual system is to determine where to attend next. In general, attention...
This study investigated feature- and dimension-based intertrial effects in visual search for a pop-o...
There are two strategies for selecting relevant information from a visual scene: according to either...
In 2 visual search experiments, the role of feature contrast/saliency signals in generating detectio...
UnrestrictedVisual attention modulates visual processing along at least three dimensions: A spatial ...
Most visual search theories (e.g., Itti & Koch, 2000; Treisman & Sato, 1990; Wolfe, 1994) suggest t...
To dissociate feature-based and object-based stages in the control of spatial attention during visua...
AbstractVisual search for an odd-one-out target is speeded when observers are provided with a cue wo...
Becker SI, Grubert A, Horstmann G, Ansorge U. Which processes dominate visual search: Bottom-up feat...
Dimension-based accounts of visual search and selection have significantly contributed to the unders...
The notion that the neural activations representing a limited set of visual features in the brain ar...
Objects that stand out from the environment tend to be of behavioral relevance, and the visual syste...
Two experiments compared reaction times (RTs) in visual search for singleton feature targets defined...
In cross-dimensional visual search tasks, target discrimination is faster when the previous trial co...
Two experiments investigated dimension-based attentional processing in a complex singleton conjuncti...
A fundamental task for the visual system is to determine where to attend next. In general, attention...
This study investigated feature- and dimension-based intertrial effects in visual search for a pop-o...
There are two strategies for selecting relevant information from a visual scene: according to either...
In 2 visual search experiments, the role of feature contrast/saliency signals in generating detectio...
UnrestrictedVisual attention modulates visual processing along at least three dimensions: A spatial ...
Most visual search theories (e.g., Itti & Koch, 2000; Treisman & Sato, 1990; Wolfe, 1994) suggest t...
To dissociate feature-based and object-based stages in the control of spatial attention during visua...
AbstractVisual search for an odd-one-out target is speeded when observers are provided with a cue wo...
Becker SI, Grubert A, Horstmann G, Ansorge U. Which processes dominate visual search: Bottom-up feat...