Allocation of attentional resources rests on predictions about the likelihood of events. While this effect has been extensively studied in the spatial attention domain where the location of a target stimulus is pre-cued, less is known about the cueing of stimulus features such as the color of a behaviorally relevant target. Moreover, there is disagreement about which types of color cues are effective for biasing attention. Here we investigated the effects of probabilistic context (percentage of cue validity, %CV) for different levels of cue abstraction to elucidate how feature-based search information is processed and used to direct attention. The color of a target was cued by presenting the perceptual color, the color word, or two-letter a...
AbstractAre locations or colors more effective cues in biasing attention? We addressed this question...
In the present study, participants searched for an odd-man-out target within the shape dimension (ei...
Top-down guidance of visual attention has classically been thought to operate in a feature-specific ...
Allocation of attentional resources rests on predictions about the likelihood of events. While this ...
Poster C42Statistical context and sensory stimulus propertiesdynamically interact during feature-bas...
In visual search tasks, attention can be guided to a target item, appearing amidst distractors, on t...
We investigated the role of spatial probabilities in target location during participants’ performanc...
Visual attention can be allocated to locations or objects, leading to enhanced processing of informa...
Models of attention posit that attentional priority is established by summing the saliency and relev...
The aim of the present experiment was to investigate attentional processing of colour and location c...
We tested whether color word cues automatically primed attentional control settings during visual se...
Our ability to select task-relevant information from cluttered visual environments is widely believe...
The environment in which we live provides a continuous amount of information to the human brain, and...
Are locations or colors more effective cues in biasing attention? We addressed this question with a ...
<p><b>A</b>, Timing of events for an example feature-based attention trial. The test stimulus consis...
AbstractAre locations or colors more effective cues in biasing attention? We addressed this question...
In the present study, participants searched for an odd-man-out target within the shape dimension (ei...
Top-down guidance of visual attention has classically been thought to operate in a feature-specific ...
Allocation of attentional resources rests on predictions about the likelihood of events. While this ...
Poster C42Statistical context and sensory stimulus propertiesdynamically interact during feature-bas...
In visual search tasks, attention can be guided to a target item, appearing amidst distractors, on t...
We investigated the role of spatial probabilities in target location during participants’ performanc...
Visual attention can be allocated to locations or objects, leading to enhanced processing of informa...
Models of attention posit that attentional priority is established by summing the saliency and relev...
The aim of the present experiment was to investigate attentional processing of colour and location c...
We tested whether color word cues automatically primed attentional control settings during visual se...
Our ability to select task-relevant information from cluttered visual environments is widely believe...
The environment in which we live provides a continuous amount of information to the human brain, and...
Are locations or colors more effective cues in biasing attention? We addressed this question with a ...
<p><b>A</b>, Timing of events for an example feature-based attention trial. The test stimulus consis...
AbstractAre locations or colors more effective cues in biasing attention? We addressed this question...
In the present study, participants searched for an odd-man-out target within the shape dimension (ei...
Top-down guidance of visual attention has classically been thought to operate in a feature-specific ...