Humans are remarkably proficient at finding objects within complex visual scenes. According to current theories of attention,1–3 visual processing of an object of interest is favored through the preparatory activation of object-specific representations in visual cortex.4–15 One key problem that is inherent to real-world visual search but is not accounted for by current theories is that a given object will produce a dramatically different retinal image depending on its location, which is unknown in advance. For instance, the color of the retinal image depends on the illumination on the object, its shape depends on the viewpoint, and (most critically) its size can vary by several orders of magnitude, depending on the distance to the observer....
Allocation of visual attention in a natural scene is controlled by the bottom-up influences in the s...
Looking for goal-relevant objects in our various environments is one of the most ubiquitous tasks th...
It is well established that we can focally attend to a specific region in visual space without shift...
Humans are remarkably proficient at finding objects within complex visual scenes. According to curre...
Humans are remarkably proficient at finding objects within a complex visual world. It has been propo...
Theories of visual selective attention propose that top-down preparatory attention signals mediate t...
Item does not contain fulltextTop-down attention is the mechanism that allows us to selectively proc...
Looking for an object that may be present in a cluttered visual display requires an advanced specifi...
Humans survive in environments that contain a vast quantity and variety of visual information. All ...
Research on attentional control has largely focused on single senses and the importance of behaviour...
The visual analysis of the world around us is an incredibly complex neural process that allows human...
Research on attentional control has largely focused on single senses and the importance of behaviour...
The amount of sensory input received by the human brain far surpasses its capacity for conscious pro...
As we sample the world via shifts in gaze, the visual system filters out irrelevant information to p...
Abstract: The ability to detect changes in the environment is necessary for appropriate interactions...
Allocation of visual attention in a natural scene is controlled by the bottom-up influences in the s...
Looking for goal-relevant objects in our various environments is one of the most ubiquitous tasks th...
It is well established that we can focally attend to a specific region in visual space without shift...
Humans are remarkably proficient at finding objects within complex visual scenes. According to curre...
Humans are remarkably proficient at finding objects within a complex visual world. It has been propo...
Theories of visual selective attention propose that top-down preparatory attention signals mediate t...
Item does not contain fulltextTop-down attention is the mechanism that allows us to selectively proc...
Looking for an object that may be present in a cluttered visual display requires an advanced specifi...
Humans survive in environments that contain a vast quantity and variety of visual information. All ...
Research on attentional control has largely focused on single senses and the importance of behaviour...
The visual analysis of the world around us is an incredibly complex neural process that allows human...
Research on attentional control has largely focused on single senses and the importance of behaviour...
The amount of sensory input received by the human brain far surpasses its capacity for conscious pro...
As we sample the world via shifts in gaze, the visual system filters out irrelevant information to p...
Abstract: The ability to detect changes in the environment is necessary for appropriate interactions...
Allocation of visual attention in a natural scene is controlled by the bottom-up influences in the s...
Looking for goal-relevant objects in our various environments is one of the most ubiquitous tasks th...
It is well established that we can focally attend to a specific region in visual space without shift...