Pseudoneglect is the tendency for the general population to over-attend to the left. While pseudoneglect is classically demonstrated using line bisection, it also occurs for visual search. The current study explored the influence of eye movements and functional cerebral asymmetry on asymmetries for visual search. In Experiment 1, 24 participants carried out a conjunction search for a target within a rectangular array. A leftward advantage for detecting targets was observed when the eyes were free to move, but not when they were restricted by short exposure durations. In Experiment 2, the effect of functional cerebral asymmetry was explored by comparing 20 right-handers and 19 left-handers. Results showed a stronger leftward bias for the rig...
Five experiments are presented, providing empirical support of the hypothesis that the sensory pheno...
When observers view an image, their initial eye movements are not equally distributed but instead ar...
Neurologically healthy participants systematically misbisect horizontal lines to the left of centre,...
Pseudoneglect is the tendency for the general population to over-attend to the left. While pseudoneg...
Neurologically normal individuals devote more attention to the left side; an asymmetry known as pseu...
Pseudoneglect refers to a tendency of neurologically healthy individuals to produce leftward percept...
International audienceVisuospatial attention has an inherent asymmetry: the leftward bias called pse...
Neurologically normal individuals demonstrate a reliable bias to the left side of space, known as ps...
Previous studies showed that the small leftward bias found in healthy humans' spatial judgments of l...
AbstractIn Experiments 1–3 we monitored search performance as a function of target eccentricity unde...
Why do we frequently fixate an object of interest presented peripherally by moving our head as well ...
Why do we frequently fixate an object of interest presented peripherally by moving our head as well ...
The goal of the present work was to investigate both horizontal and vertical asymmetries. In the fir...
Most people tend to bisect horizontal lines slightly to the left of their true center (pseudoneglect...
There is evidence that automatic visual attention favors the right side. This study investigated whe...
Five experiments are presented, providing empirical support of the hypothesis that the sensory pheno...
When observers view an image, their initial eye movements are not equally distributed but instead ar...
Neurologically healthy participants systematically misbisect horizontal lines to the left of centre,...
Pseudoneglect is the tendency for the general population to over-attend to the left. While pseudoneg...
Neurologically normal individuals devote more attention to the left side; an asymmetry known as pseu...
Pseudoneglect refers to a tendency of neurologically healthy individuals to produce leftward percept...
International audienceVisuospatial attention has an inherent asymmetry: the leftward bias called pse...
Neurologically normal individuals demonstrate a reliable bias to the left side of space, known as ps...
Previous studies showed that the small leftward bias found in healthy humans' spatial judgments of l...
AbstractIn Experiments 1–3 we monitored search performance as a function of target eccentricity unde...
Why do we frequently fixate an object of interest presented peripherally by moving our head as well ...
Why do we frequently fixate an object of interest presented peripherally by moving our head as well ...
The goal of the present work was to investigate both horizontal and vertical asymmetries. In the fir...
Most people tend to bisect horizontal lines slightly to the left of their true center (pseudoneglect...
There is evidence that automatic visual attention favors the right side. This study investigated whe...
Five experiments are presented, providing empirical support of the hypothesis that the sensory pheno...
When observers view an image, their initial eye movements are not equally distributed but instead ar...
Neurologically healthy participants systematically misbisect horizontal lines to the left of centre,...