We investigated whether the improvement by attention in visual search is due to the exclusion of distractors, change of decisional criteria, or signal enhancement. Observers searched for the presence of a target line with small (10\ub0) or large (20\ub0) orientation differences from 2, 4, or 8 background elements that were either close or sparse, and either presented at large (~5 deg) or small (~1.5 deg) eccentricity. Results show that element separation affects target sensitivity in opposite directions: d' is higher at small spacing for less eccentric elements, and is higher at large spacing for more eccentric elements. Cueing relevant elements in displays with small spacing and a fixed number of eight elements improves visual search only ...
A fundamental task for the visual system is to determine where to attend next. In general, attention...
Five experiments are presented, providing empirical support of the hypothesis that the sensory pheno...
We wish to study observers' ability to divide attention more and more finely in a search task, i.e.,...
AbstractIn Experiments 1–3 we monitored search performance as a function of target eccentricity unde...
AbstractWe report two visual search experiments that explain an eccentricity effect previously found...
AbstractIn Experiments 1–3 we monitored search performance as a function of target eccentricity unde...
Funding text Supported by a grant from the Icelandic Research Fund (173947-052) and the University o...
Funding text Supported by a grant from the Icelandic Research Fund (173947-052) and the University o...
AbstractWhen observers simultaneously monitor several positions in the visual field, distracting sti...
Attentional selection requires both the enhancement of target stimuli and the suppression of distrac...
We investigated orientation categories in the guidance of attention in visual search. In the first t...
AbstractWe report two visual search experiments that explain an eccentricity effect previously found...
In visual search, distractors that fall between fixation and the target are more disruptive than dis...
Five experiments are presented, providing empirical support of the hypothesis that the sensory pheno...
Previous research suggests that the allocation of attention is largely controlled either in a stimul...
A fundamental task for the visual system is to determine where to attend next. In general, attention...
Five experiments are presented, providing empirical support of the hypothesis that the sensory pheno...
We wish to study observers' ability to divide attention more and more finely in a search task, i.e.,...
AbstractIn Experiments 1–3 we monitored search performance as a function of target eccentricity unde...
AbstractWe report two visual search experiments that explain an eccentricity effect previously found...
AbstractIn Experiments 1–3 we monitored search performance as a function of target eccentricity unde...
Funding text Supported by a grant from the Icelandic Research Fund (173947-052) and the University o...
Funding text Supported by a grant from the Icelandic Research Fund (173947-052) and the University o...
AbstractWhen observers simultaneously monitor several positions in the visual field, distracting sti...
Attentional selection requires both the enhancement of target stimuli and the suppression of distrac...
We investigated orientation categories in the guidance of attention in visual search. In the first t...
AbstractWe report two visual search experiments that explain an eccentricity effect previously found...
In visual search, distractors that fall between fixation and the target are more disruptive than dis...
Five experiments are presented, providing empirical support of the hypothesis that the sensory pheno...
Previous research suggests that the allocation of attention is largely controlled either in a stimul...
A fundamental task for the visual system is to determine where to attend next. In general, attention...
Five experiments are presented, providing empirical support of the hypothesis that the sensory pheno...
We wish to study observers' ability to divide attention more and more finely in a search task, i.e.,...