Abrupt onsets have been shown to strongly attract attention in a stimulus-driven, bottom-up manner. However, the precise mechanism that drives capture by onsets is still debated. According to the new object account, abrupt onsets capture attention because they signal the appearance of a new object. Yantis and Johnson (1990) used a visual search task and showed that up to four onsets can be automatically prioritized. However, in their study the number of onsets co-varied with the total number of items in the display, allowing for a possible confound between these two variables. In the present study, display size was fixed at eight items while the number of onsets was systematically varied between zero and eight. Experiment 1 showed a systema...
This study examined how attentional set mitigates attention capture by onsets occurring between know...
A sudden change in color is typically less salient in capturing attention than is the onset of a new...
A highly debated question in attention research is to what extent attention is biased by bottom-up f...
Abrupt onsets have been shown to strongly attract attention in a stimulus-driven, bottom-up manner. ...
Do onsets automatically capture attention? Spatial-cuing experiments often reveal no capture by onse...
Can salient stimuli, such as abrupt onsets, capture attention? Some researchers consistently find t...
Free to read at publisher Onset primacy is a robust visual phenomenon in which appearance of new obj...
Previous research using a spatial cuing paradigm in which a distractor cue preceded the target has s...
Two experiments were conducted to investigate the capture of attention by suddenly appearing items (...
In five experiments, we investigated the power of targets defined by the onset or offset of one of a...
Is attentional capture contingent on top-down control settings or involuntarily driven by salient st...
In two experiments we examined whether the appearance of a new object has attentional priority over...
We investigated whether attentional set is available at the beginning of a trial or whether it devel...
Attentional capture by abrupt onsets can be modulated by several factors, including the complexity, ...
We examined whether there exists stimulus-driven attentional capture by onsets, and if so, whether t...
This study examined how attentional set mitigates attention capture by onsets occurring between know...
A sudden change in color is typically less salient in capturing attention than is the onset of a new...
A highly debated question in attention research is to what extent attention is biased by bottom-up f...
Abrupt onsets have been shown to strongly attract attention in a stimulus-driven, bottom-up manner. ...
Do onsets automatically capture attention? Spatial-cuing experiments often reveal no capture by onse...
Can salient stimuli, such as abrupt onsets, capture attention? Some researchers consistently find t...
Free to read at publisher Onset primacy is a robust visual phenomenon in which appearance of new obj...
Previous research using a spatial cuing paradigm in which a distractor cue preceded the target has s...
Two experiments were conducted to investigate the capture of attention by suddenly appearing items (...
In five experiments, we investigated the power of targets defined by the onset or offset of one of a...
Is attentional capture contingent on top-down control settings or involuntarily driven by salient st...
In two experiments we examined whether the appearance of a new object has attentional priority over...
We investigated whether attentional set is available at the beginning of a trial or whether it devel...
Attentional capture by abrupt onsets can be modulated by several factors, including the complexity, ...
We examined whether there exists stimulus-driven attentional capture by onsets, and if so, whether t...
This study examined how attentional set mitigates attention capture by onsets occurring between know...
A sudden change in color is typically less salient in capturing attention than is the onset of a new...
A highly debated question in attention research is to what extent attention is biased by bottom-up f...