We investigated the effect of varying interstimulus spacing on an upright among inverted face search and a red–green among green–red bisected disk search. Both tasks are classic examples of serial search; however, spacing affects them very differently: As spacing increased, face discrimination performance improved significantly, whereas performance on the bisected disks remained poor. (No effect of spacing was observed for either a red among green or an L among + search tasks, two classic examples of parallel search.) In a second experiment, we precued the target location so that attention was no longer a limiting factor: Both serial search tasks were now equally affected by spacing, a result we attribute to a more classical form of crowdin...
Selection of a feature singleton target in visual search tasks, e.g., a red target among green distr...
AbstractIn order for our visual system to deal with the massive amount of sensory input, some of thi...
Olds, Cowan and Jolicoeur (2000) showed that although the mechanisms underlying visual search have t...
We investigated the effect of varying interstimulus spacing on an upright among inverted face search...
Visual search is central to the investigation of selective visual attention. Classical theories prop...
In visual search, inefficient performance of human observers is typically characterized by a steady ...
AbstractUnder what search conditions does attention affect perceptual processes, resulting in capaci...
AbstractIn a visual search task, a salient distractor often elongates response times (RTs) even when...
Investigators have for some time been interested in identifying factors which influence visual searc...
We investigated the role of crowding in saccadic selection during visual search. To guide eye moveme...
Most theories of visual processing assume that a target will "pop out" from an array of distractors ...
Processes of attention and attention-guidance are key to visual search, yet the standard paradigm fo...
Two experiments compared reaction times (RTs) in visual search for singleton feature targets defined...
Decades of vision research on how people search for a target item among distractor items have always...
Hulleman & Olivers reject item-based serial models of visual search, and suggest that items are proc...
Selection of a feature singleton target in visual search tasks, e.g., a red target among green distr...
AbstractIn order for our visual system to deal with the massive amount of sensory input, some of thi...
Olds, Cowan and Jolicoeur (2000) showed that although the mechanisms underlying visual search have t...
We investigated the effect of varying interstimulus spacing on an upright among inverted face search...
Visual search is central to the investigation of selective visual attention. Classical theories prop...
In visual search, inefficient performance of human observers is typically characterized by a steady ...
AbstractUnder what search conditions does attention affect perceptual processes, resulting in capaci...
AbstractIn a visual search task, a salient distractor often elongates response times (RTs) even when...
Investigators have for some time been interested in identifying factors which influence visual searc...
We investigated the role of crowding in saccadic selection during visual search. To guide eye moveme...
Most theories of visual processing assume that a target will "pop out" from an array of distractors ...
Processes of attention and attention-guidance are key to visual search, yet the standard paradigm fo...
Two experiments compared reaction times (RTs) in visual search for singleton feature targets defined...
Decades of vision research on how people search for a target item among distractor items have always...
Hulleman & Olivers reject item-based serial models of visual search, and suggest that items are proc...
Selection of a feature singleton target in visual search tasks, e.g., a red target among green distr...
AbstractIn order for our visual system to deal with the massive amount of sensory input, some of thi...
Olds, Cowan and Jolicoeur (2000) showed that although the mechanisms underlying visual search have t...