Inhibition of return (IOR)—the automatic bias against returning attention or gaze to recently visited locations—is thought to have both collicular and cortical components and has been associated with the oculomotor system. Recently, distinct IOR mechanisms have been revealed that may have collicular and cortical origins: While standard luminance stimuli cause IOR in both manual and saccadic eye movement responses, “S cone” stimuli, which are invisible to the direct collicular pathway, caused manual IOR but not saccadic IOR. However, it has not been shown that the separate mechanisms are both inhibition of return, rather than facilitation due to attentional momentum or a visual motion transient. Here, we examined this question using four tar...
The term Inhibition of Return (IOR) describes a performance decrement for stimuli appearing at a rec...
Inhibition of return (IOR) refers to the relative suppression of processing at locations that have r...
Previous research has shown that when subjects search for a particular target object the sudden appe...
Inhibition of return (IOR)—the automatic bias against returning attention or gaze to recently visite...
Visual orienting of attention and gaze are widely considered to be mediated by shared neural pathway...
Visual orienting of attention and gaze are widely considered to be mediated by shared neural pathway...
We propose two explicit mechanisms contributing to oculomotor inhibition of return (IOR): sensory an...
Inhibition of return (IOR) refers to an orienting mechanism that biases attention against returning ...
It has recently been demonstrated that there are independent sensory and motor mechanisms underlying...
This dissertation investigates inhibition of return (IOR) as two forms of inhibitory cueing effects ...
After presentation of a peripheral cue, facilitation at the cued location is followed by inhibition ...
Inhibition of return (IOR) refers to the relative suppression of processing at locations that have r...
Inhibition of return (IOR) refers to the relative suppression of processing at locations that have r...
Saccade latencies are longer prior to an eye movement to a recently fixated location than to control...
Inhibition of return (IOR) is a phenomenon that has been thought to be closely associated with atten...
The term Inhibition of Return (IOR) describes a performance decrement for stimuli appearing at a rec...
Inhibition of return (IOR) refers to the relative suppression of processing at locations that have r...
Previous research has shown that when subjects search for a particular target object the sudden appe...
Inhibition of return (IOR)—the automatic bias against returning attention or gaze to recently visite...
Visual orienting of attention and gaze are widely considered to be mediated by shared neural pathway...
Visual orienting of attention and gaze are widely considered to be mediated by shared neural pathway...
We propose two explicit mechanisms contributing to oculomotor inhibition of return (IOR): sensory an...
Inhibition of return (IOR) refers to an orienting mechanism that biases attention against returning ...
It has recently been demonstrated that there are independent sensory and motor mechanisms underlying...
This dissertation investigates inhibition of return (IOR) as two forms of inhibitory cueing effects ...
After presentation of a peripheral cue, facilitation at the cued location is followed by inhibition ...
Inhibition of return (IOR) refers to the relative suppression of processing at locations that have r...
Inhibition of return (IOR) refers to the relative suppression of processing at locations that have r...
Saccade latencies are longer prior to an eye movement to a recently fixated location than to control...
Inhibition of return (IOR) is a phenomenon that has been thought to be closely associated with atten...
The term Inhibition of Return (IOR) describes a performance decrement for stimuli appearing at a rec...
Inhibition of return (IOR) refers to the relative suppression of processing at locations that have r...
Previous research has shown that when subjects search for a particular target object the sudden appe...