People often fail to detect changes between successively presented tactile patterns, a phenomenon known as tactile change blindness. In this study, we investigated whether changes introduced to tactile patterns are detected better when a participant's attention is focused on the location where the change occurs. Across two experiments, participants (N = 55) were instructed to detect changes between two consecutively presented tactile patterns. In half of the trials, the stimulated body sites in the two patterns were identical. In the other half of the trials, one of the stimulated body locations differed between the two patterns. Endogenous (or voluntary) attention was manipulated by instructing participants which new bodily location was mo...
Recent studies of change detection have revealed that people are surprisingly poor at detecting chan...
Recent studies of change detection have revealed that people are surprisingly poor at detecting chan...
Directing one's gaze at a body part reduces detection speed and enhances the processing of tactile s...
People often fail to detect changes between successively presented tactile patterns, a phenomenon kn...
People often fail to detect changes between successively presented tactile patterns, a phenomenon kn...
We investigated the tactile cuing of visual spatial attention using spatially-informative (75% valid...
Change blindness, the surprising inability of people to detect significant changes between consecuti...
Change blindness, the surprising inability of people to detect significant changes between consecuti...
Interest in the use of tactile information displays has grown rapidly in recent years. However, rela...
People can maintain accurate representations of visual changes without necessarily being aware of th...
People can maintain accurate representations of visual changes without necessarily being aware of th...
Tactile perception is often impaired during movement. The present study investigated whether such se...
Directing one\u2019s gaze at a body part reduces detection speed and enhances the processing of tact...
Directing one’s gaze at a body part reduces detection speed and enhances the processing of tactile s...
Directing one’s gaze at a body part reduces detection speed and enhances the processing of tactile s...
Recent studies of change detection have revealed that people are surprisingly poor at detecting chan...
Recent studies of change detection have revealed that people are surprisingly poor at detecting chan...
Directing one's gaze at a body part reduces detection speed and enhances the processing of tactile s...
People often fail to detect changes between successively presented tactile patterns, a phenomenon kn...
People often fail to detect changes between successively presented tactile patterns, a phenomenon kn...
We investigated the tactile cuing of visual spatial attention using spatially-informative (75% valid...
Change blindness, the surprising inability of people to detect significant changes between consecuti...
Change blindness, the surprising inability of people to detect significant changes between consecuti...
Interest in the use of tactile information displays has grown rapidly in recent years. However, rela...
People can maintain accurate representations of visual changes without necessarily being aware of th...
People can maintain accurate representations of visual changes without necessarily being aware of th...
Tactile perception is often impaired during movement. The present study investigated whether such se...
Directing one\u2019s gaze at a body part reduces detection speed and enhances the processing of tact...
Directing one’s gaze at a body part reduces detection speed and enhances the processing of tactile s...
Directing one’s gaze at a body part reduces detection speed and enhances the processing of tactile s...
Recent studies of change detection have revealed that people are surprisingly poor at detecting chan...
Recent studies of change detection have revealed that people are surprisingly poor at detecting chan...
Directing one's gaze at a body part reduces detection speed and enhances the processing of tactile s...