Negative priming, the increase in response time and/or errors to targets previously encountered as distractors, is explained by inhibitory mechanisms that block the access of distractor representations to response systems. The processing of unfamiliar human faces was investigated using negative priming. Observers viewed a row of faces to decide whether 2 target faces were the same or different. Response latencies were longer when 1 or both targets had appeared as distractors on the immediately preceding trial - evidence that never-before seen faces are represented and require inhibition. Response latencies were shorter when face targets had appeared as distractors, either corrupted with high-frequency noise or contrast inverted - evidence t...
Visual attention is guided by the history of selections in previous trials, an effect usually referr...
Decades of investigation have led to tremendous progress in our understanding of the mechanisms that...
Horstmann G, Becker SI. Attentional effects of negative faces: Top-down contingent or involuntary? P...
A priming paradigm was employed to investigate the processing of an ignored object during selection ...
Negative priming (NP) is characterized by longer reaction times when responding to stimuli which hav...
People have particular difficulty ignoring distractors that depict faces. This phenomenon has been a...
Selective attention has been viewed as a dual-process mechanism, that is, exciting targets and inhib...
grantor: University of TorontoNegative priming is defined as a delay in responding to a st...
Reaction times to previously ignored information are often delayed, a phenomenon referred to as nega...
Research in both stimulus-response compatibility and negative priming seeks to understand the contro...
Reaction times to previously ignored information are often delayed, a phenomenon referred to as nega...
Negative priming (NP) effects from irrelevant distractors were assessed as a function of perceptual ...
Masked priming is a phenomenon in which subliminal stimuli modulate responses to subsequent visible ...
Negative priming (NP) refers to the finding that people's responses to probe targets previously pres...
In two priming experiments, we manipulated the perceptual quality of the target or the distractor on...
Visual attention is guided by the history of selections in previous trials, an effect usually referr...
Decades of investigation have led to tremendous progress in our understanding of the mechanisms that...
Horstmann G, Becker SI. Attentional effects of negative faces: Top-down contingent or involuntary? P...
A priming paradigm was employed to investigate the processing of an ignored object during selection ...
Negative priming (NP) is characterized by longer reaction times when responding to stimuli which hav...
People have particular difficulty ignoring distractors that depict faces. This phenomenon has been a...
Selective attention has been viewed as a dual-process mechanism, that is, exciting targets and inhib...
grantor: University of TorontoNegative priming is defined as a delay in responding to a st...
Reaction times to previously ignored information are often delayed, a phenomenon referred to as nega...
Research in both stimulus-response compatibility and negative priming seeks to understand the contro...
Reaction times to previously ignored information are often delayed, a phenomenon referred to as nega...
Negative priming (NP) effects from irrelevant distractors were assessed as a function of perceptual ...
Masked priming is a phenomenon in which subliminal stimuli modulate responses to subsequent visible ...
Negative priming (NP) refers to the finding that people's responses to probe targets previously pres...
In two priming experiments, we manipulated the perceptual quality of the target or the distractor on...
Visual attention is guided by the history of selections in previous trials, an effect usually referr...
Decades of investigation have led to tremendous progress in our understanding of the mechanisms that...
Horstmann G, Becker SI. Attentional effects of negative faces: Top-down contingent or involuntary? P...