People often remain "blind" to visual changes occurring during a brief interruption of the display. The processing stages responsible for such failure remain unresolved. We used event-related potentials to determine the time course of brain activity during conscious change detection versus change blindness. Participants saw two successive visual displays, each with two faces, and reported whether one of the faces changed between the first and second displays. Relative to blindness, change detection was associated with a distinct pattern of neural activity at several successive processing stages, including an enhanced occipital P1 response and a sustained frontal activity (CNV-like potential) after the first display, before the change itself...
Change blindness refers to the inability to detect visual changes if introduced together with an eye...
Change blindness refers to the inability to detect visual changes if introduced together with an eye...
Abstract. Change blindness refers to the inability to detect visual changes if introduced together w...
People often remain "blind" to visual changes occurring during a brief interruption of the display. ...
People often remain "blind" to visual changes occurring during a brief interruption of the display. ...
Despite the importance of change detection (CD) for visual perception and for performance in our env...
Detecting changes in an ever-changing environment is highly advan-tageous, and this ability may be c...
Despite the importance of change detection (CD) for visual perception and for performance in our env...
Observers are often unaware of changes in their visual environment until attention is drawn to the l...
We examined electrophysiological correlates of conscious change detection versus change blindness fo...
SummaryObservers are often unaware of changes in their visual environment when attention is not focu...
Change blindness is a failure of reporting major changes across consecutive images if separated, e.g...
& We investigated using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) the neural processes associ...
To identify electrophysiological correlates of change detection, event-related brain potentials (ERP...
Background. Change blindness refers to a failure to detect changes between consecutively presented...
Change blindness refers to the inability to detect visual changes if introduced together with an eye...
Change blindness refers to the inability to detect visual changes if introduced together with an eye...
Abstract. Change blindness refers to the inability to detect visual changes if introduced together w...
People often remain "blind" to visual changes occurring during a brief interruption of the display. ...
People often remain "blind" to visual changes occurring during a brief interruption of the display. ...
Despite the importance of change detection (CD) for visual perception and for performance in our env...
Detecting changes in an ever-changing environment is highly advan-tageous, and this ability may be c...
Despite the importance of change detection (CD) for visual perception and for performance in our env...
Observers are often unaware of changes in their visual environment until attention is drawn to the l...
We examined electrophysiological correlates of conscious change detection versus change blindness fo...
SummaryObservers are often unaware of changes in their visual environment when attention is not focu...
Change blindness is a failure of reporting major changes across consecutive images if separated, e.g...
& We investigated using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) the neural processes associ...
To identify electrophysiological correlates of change detection, event-related brain potentials (ERP...
Background. Change blindness refers to a failure to detect changes between consecutively presented...
Change blindness refers to the inability to detect visual changes if introduced together with an eye...
Change blindness refers to the inability to detect visual changes if introduced together with an eye...
Abstract. Change blindness refers to the inability to detect visual changes if introduced together w...