Simultaneously presented signals may be processed in serial or in parallel. One potentially valuable indicator of a system’s characteristics may be the appearance of multimodality in the response time (RT) distributions. It is known that standard serial models can predict multimodal RT distributions, but it is unknown whether multimodality is diagnostic of serial systems, or whether alternative architectures, such as parallel ones, can also make such predictions. We demonstrate via simulations that a multimodal RT distribution is not sufficient by itself to rule out parallel self-terminating processing, even with limited trial numbers. These predictions are discussed within the context of recent data indicating the existence of multimodal d...
In multitasking research, a central question revolves around whether humans can process tasks in par...
This investigation brings together response-time, system identification methodology (e.g., Townsend ...
We analyze sets of mental processes, some of which are concurrent and some of which are sequential, ...
When observers are asked to report a feature of a single target displayed in rapid serial visual pre...
It was formerly demonstrated that virtually all reasonable exhaustive serial models, and a more cons...
A novel neural network model of pre-attention processing in visual-search tasks is presented. Using ...
A mathematical model accounting for both accuracy and response time (RT) data in standard visual sea...
Multinomial processing tree (MPT) models account for observed categorical responses by assuming a fi...
The assumption of serial attentive processing during visual search (Treisman & Sato,1990; Wolfe,1994...
Difficult visual search is often attributed to time-limited serial attention operations, although ne...
In general cognitive systems are comprised of more than a single subprocess. The arrangement and lin...
Abstract Although it is generally recognized that the con-current performance of two tasks incurs co...
Among the possible response time (RT) decomposition rules, three are of a traditional interest: addi...
Visual search is central to the investigation of selective visual attention. Classical theories prop...
Abstract Recent theoretical advances in theories of catego-rization response times have made it poss...
In multitasking research, a central question revolves around whether humans can process tasks in par...
This investigation brings together response-time, system identification methodology (e.g., Townsend ...
We analyze sets of mental processes, some of which are concurrent and some of which are sequential, ...
When observers are asked to report a feature of a single target displayed in rapid serial visual pre...
It was formerly demonstrated that virtually all reasonable exhaustive serial models, and a more cons...
A novel neural network model of pre-attention processing in visual-search tasks is presented. Using ...
A mathematical model accounting for both accuracy and response time (RT) data in standard visual sea...
Multinomial processing tree (MPT) models account for observed categorical responses by assuming a fi...
The assumption of serial attentive processing during visual search (Treisman & Sato,1990; Wolfe,1994...
Difficult visual search is often attributed to time-limited serial attention operations, although ne...
In general cognitive systems are comprised of more than a single subprocess. The arrangement and lin...
Abstract Although it is generally recognized that the con-current performance of two tasks incurs co...
Among the possible response time (RT) decomposition rules, three are of a traditional interest: addi...
Visual search is central to the investigation of selective visual attention. Classical theories prop...
Abstract Recent theoretical advances in theories of catego-rization response times have made it poss...
In multitasking research, a central question revolves around whether humans can process tasks in par...
This investigation brings together response-time, system identification methodology (e.g., Townsend ...
We analyze sets of mental processes, some of which are concurrent and some of which are sequential, ...