In pattern masking, the target and mask are presented at the same location and follow one another very closely in time. When the observer attends to the target, he or she must also attend to the mask, as the switching time for attention is quite slow. In a series of experiments, we present mask–target–mask sequences staggered in time and location (Cavanagh, Holcombe, & Chou, 2008) that allow participants to attentively track the target location without attending to the masks. The results show that the strength of masking is on average unaffected by the removal of attention from the masks. Moreover, after isolating the target location perceptually with moving attention, it is clear that the target, when at threshold, has not been degraded or...
AbstractMask-dependent cuing effects, like those previously found in yes–no detection, were found in...
Three experiments tested how the physical format and information content of forward and backward mas...
Human visual awareness is inherently limited. When we look at a visual scene, we are conscious of on...
AbstractAttention to a visual target can affect perception of a subsequent target for half a second,...
The relationship between attention and visual masking was investigated in a cued detection task usin...
A central assumption of models proposed to explain object substitution masking (OSM) is that the phe...
A stimulus (mask) reduces the visibility of another stimulus (target) when they are presented in clo...
AbstractThree experiments compared letter identification accuracy over a wide range of target-mask i...
AbstractThe visibility of a target can be strongly affected by a trailing mask. Research on visual b...
The visibility of a target can be strongly affected by a trailing mask. Research on visual backward ...
Deficits in visual attention are often demonstrated in visual masking experiments. A typical “maskin...
AbstractThe perception of a stimulus can be impaired when presented in the context of a masking patt...
Visual search efficiency improves by presenting (previewing) one set of distractors before the targe...
Object-substitution masking (OSM) occurs when a mask, such as four dots that surround a brief target...
The strength of visual backward masking depends on the stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA) between targe...
AbstractMask-dependent cuing effects, like those previously found in yes–no detection, were found in...
Three experiments tested how the physical format and information content of forward and backward mas...
Human visual awareness is inherently limited. When we look at a visual scene, we are conscious of on...
AbstractAttention to a visual target can affect perception of a subsequent target for half a second,...
The relationship between attention and visual masking was investigated in a cued detection task usin...
A central assumption of models proposed to explain object substitution masking (OSM) is that the phe...
A stimulus (mask) reduces the visibility of another stimulus (target) when they are presented in clo...
AbstractThree experiments compared letter identification accuracy over a wide range of target-mask i...
AbstractThe visibility of a target can be strongly affected by a trailing mask. Research on visual b...
The visibility of a target can be strongly affected by a trailing mask. Research on visual backward ...
Deficits in visual attention are often demonstrated in visual masking experiments. A typical “maskin...
AbstractThe perception of a stimulus can be impaired when presented in the context of a masking patt...
Visual search efficiency improves by presenting (previewing) one set of distractors before the targe...
Object-substitution masking (OSM) occurs when a mask, such as four dots that surround a brief target...
The strength of visual backward masking depends on the stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA) between targe...
AbstractMask-dependent cuing effects, like those previously found in yes–no detection, were found in...
Three experiments tested how the physical format and information content of forward and backward mas...
Human visual awareness is inherently limited. When we look at a visual scene, we are conscious of on...