Investigations into the persistence of top-down control settings do not accurately reflect the nature of dynamic tasks. They typically involve extended practice with an initial task, and this initial task usually shares similar stimuli with a second task. Recent work shows that visual attention and search can be affected by limited exposure to a preceding, unrelated task and the current study explored the temporal characteristics of this ‘carry-over’ effect. Thirty-four participants completed one, four, or eight simple letter searches and then searched a natural scene. The spatial layout of letters influenced spread of search in the pictures and this was further impacted by the time spent in the initial task, yet the carry-over effect dimin...
Task demands that influence scanning behaviour in one task can cause that behaviour to persist to a ...
Previous research suggests that the allocation of attention is largely controlled either in a stimul...
The top-down allocation of attention is based on the goals of the observer, however there is an argu...
Investigations into the persistence of top-down control settings do not accurately reflect the natur...
Task performance is influenced by the allocation of visual attention, and models of scanning behavio...
Three experiments were conducted to investigate the carry-over of a location-based attentional set f...
A top-down attentional set can persist from a relevant task to an irrelevant task, influencing alloc...
Allocation of visual attention in a natural scene is controlled by the bottom-up influences in the s...
Three experiments explored the transference of visual scanning behaviour between two unrelated tasks...
A top-down attentional set allows selective processing of the most informative aspects of a scene by...
Top-down attentional settings can persist between two unrelated tasks, influencing visual attention ...
Thompson and Crundall (2011) reported an effect whereby eye-movements from one task (counting vowels...
The time needed to search for an object in a complex environment increases with the number of distra...
Task demands that influence scanning behaviour in one task can cause that behaviour to persist to a ...
Previous research suggests that the allocation of attention is largely controlled either in a stimul...
The top-down allocation of attention is based on the goals of the observer, however there is an argu...
Investigations into the persistence of top-down control settings do not accurately reflect the natur...
Task performance is influenced by the allocation of visual attention, and models of scanning behavio...
Three experiments were conducted to investigate the carry-over of a location-based attentional set f...
A top-down attentional set can persist from a relevant task to an irrelevant task, influencing alloc...
Allocation of visual attention in a natural scene is controlled by the bottom-up influences in the s...
Three experiments explored the transference of visual scanning behaviour between two unrelated tasks...
A top-down attentional set allows selective processing of the most informative aspects of a scene by...
Top-down attentional settings can persist between two unrelated tasks, influencing visual attention ...
Thompson and Crundall (2011) reported an effect whereby eye-movements from one task (counting vowels...
The time needed to search for an object in a complex environment increases with the number of distra...
Task demands that influence scanning behaviour in one task can cause that behaviour to persist to a ...
Previous research suggests that the allocation of attention is largely controlled either in a stimul...
The top-down allocation of attention is based on the goals of the observer, however there is an argu...