International audienceBoundary extension (BE) refers to the tendency to remember a previously perceived scene with a greater spatial expanse. This phenomenon is described as resulting from different sources of information: external (i.e., visual) and internally driven (i.e., amodal, conceptual, and contextual) information. Although the literature has emphasized the role of top-down expectations to account for layout extrapolation, their effect has rarely been tested experimentally. In this research, we attempted to determine how visual context affects BE, as a function of scene exposure duration (long, short). To induce knowledge about visual context, the memorization phase of the camera distance paradigm was preceded by a preexposure phase...
In the current thesis, we present a series of three ERP experiments investigating the time-course an...
In contextual cueing, the position of a target within a group of distractors is learned over repeate...
Recent work to be reviewed indicates that a brief presentation of a prime scene (as little as 200 ms...
International audienceBoundary extension (BE) refers to the tendency to remember a previously percei...
A scene is never perceived in its entirety. The input for scene comprehension is always a partial vi...
International audienceIn a constantly changing environment, one of the conditions for adaptation is ...
In the present study, we examined how context of instruction and information in the visual array to ...
Boundary extension is a robust scene perception phenomenon in which observers erroneously remember s...
The ability to perceive and remember the spatial layout of a scene is critical to understanding the ...
Boundary extension is a perceptual phenomenon in which people remember more of a scene than they act...
Boundary extension (BE) is a memory error in which observers remember more of a scene than they actu...
Expectation for context is perhaps the most influential contributor to episodic memory. Although res...
One of the most compelling phenomena in visual memory is the Boundary Extension (BE) which is the t...
International audienceCoined by Intraub and Richardson in 1989, boundary extension phenomenon refers...
International audiencePrevious research using the contextual cuing paradigm has revealed both quanti...
In the current thesis, we present a series of three ERP experiments investigating the time-course an...
In contextual cueing, the position of a target within a group of distractors is learned over repeate...
Recent work to be reviewed indicates that a brief presentation of a prime scene (as little as 200 ms...
International audienceBoundary extension (BE) refers to the tendency to remember a previously percei...
A scene is never perceived in its entirety. The input for scene comprehension is always a partial vi...
International audienceIn a constantly changing environment, one of the conditions for adaptation is ...
In the present study, we examined how context of instruction and information in the visual array to ...
Boundary extension is a robust scene perception phenomenon in which observers erroneously remember s...
The ability to perceive and remember the spatial layout of a scene is critical to understanding the ...
Boundary extension is a perceptual phenomenon in which people remember more of a scene than they act...
Boundary extension (BE) is a memory error in which observers remember more of a scene than they actu...
Expectation for context is perhaps the most influential contributor to episodic memory. Although res...
One of the most compelling phenomena in visual memory is the Boundary Extension (BE) which is the t...
International audienceCoined by Intraub and Richardson in 1989, boundary extension phenomenon refers...
International audiencePrevious research using the contextual cuing paradigm has revealed both quanti...
In the current thesis, we present a series of three ERP experiments investigating the time-course an...
In contextual cueing, the position of a target within a group of distractors is learned over repeate...
Recent work to be reviewed indicates that a brief presentation of a prime scene (as little as 200 ms...