A central bias in spatial selection has been proposed to explain the decreasing search efficiency with increasing target eccentricity that results when distractors can occur closer to fixation than the target (J. M. Wolfe, P. O'Neill, and S. C. Bennett, 1998). The authors found evidence for such a bias using an odd-man-out variant of conjunction search. However, the bias was absent for the same displays when the identity of the odd-man-out target was known in advance. The authors propose that (a) top-down knowledge of a target feature supports grouping on this feature and (b) grouping links a peripheral target to central distractors expressing the same feature, increasing the attentional weighting afforded to the target and, consequently, f...
Larger benefits of spatial attention are observed when distractor interference is prevalent, support...
Theories of attention can be separated into those that select by location, and those that select by ...
Previous studies have demonstrated that observers can search through a subset of items carrying a mi...
In visual search tasks, spatial attention selects the locations containing a target or a distractor ...
We investigated whether the improvement by attention in visual search is due to the exclusion of dis...
When participants perform a selective centroid task, they are instructed to attend to a specific sti...
Becker SI, Grubert A, Horstmann G, Ansorge U. Which processes dominate visual search: Bottom-up feat...
Visual search for feature singletons is slowed when a task-irrelevant, but more salient distracter s...
Funding text Supported by a grant from the Icelandic Research Fund (173947-052) and the University o...
The current study simultaneously examined the potentiality of a magnocellular attentional advantage ...
AbstractPrevious studies have demonstrated that observers can search through a subset of items carry...
In visual search, distractors that fall between fixation and the target are more disruptive than dis...
It is well known that spatial attention can be directed in a top-down way to task-relevant locations...
Previous research suggests that the allocation of attention is largely controlled either in a stimul...
According to Feature Integration Theory (Treisman & Gelade, 1980), search for a target defined by fe...
Larger benefits of spatial attention are observed when distractor interference is prevalent, support...
Theories of attention can be separated into those that select by location, and those that select by ...
Previous studies have demonstrated that observers can search through a subset of items carrying a mi...
In visual search tasks, spatial attention selects the locations containing a target or a distractor ...
We investigated whether the improvement by attention in visual search is due to the exclusion of dis...
When participants perform a selective centroid task, they are instructed to attend to a specific sti...
Becker SI, Grubert A, Horstmann G, Ansorge U. Which processes dominate visual search: Bottom-up feat...
Visual search for feature singletons is slowed when a task-irrelevant, but more salient distracter s...
Funding text Supported by a grant from the Icelandic Research Fund (173947-052) and the University o...
The current study simultaneously examined the potentiality of a magnocellular attentional advantage ...
AbstractPrevious studies have demonstrated that observers can search through a subset of items carry...
In visual search, distractors that fall between fixation and the target are more disruptive than dis...
It is well known that spatial attention can be directed in a top-down way to task-relevant locations...
Previous research suggests that the allocation of attention is largely controlled either in a stimul...
According to Feature Integration Theory (Treisman & Gelade, 1980), search for a target defined by fe...
Larger benefits of spatial attention are observed when distractor interference is prevalent, support...
Theories of attention can be separated into those that select by location, and those that select by ...
Previous studies have demonstrated that observers can search through a subset of items carrying a mi...