The question whether multiple objects are selected serially or in parallel remains contentious. Previous studies employed the N2pc component as a marker of attentional selection to show that multiple selection processes can be activated concurrently. The present study demonstrates that the concurrent selection of multiple targets reflects genuinely parallel processing that is unaffected by whether or when an additional selection process is elicited simultaneously for another target. Experiment 1 showed that N2pc components triggered during the selection of a colour-defined target were not modulated by the presence versus absence of a second target that appeared in close temporal proximity. Experiment 2 revealed that the same rapid parallel ...
Most investigations of visual search have focused on the discrimination between a search target and ...
The human brain recurrently prioritizes task-relevant over task-irrelevant visual information. A cen...
The question whether the control of attention during visual search is always feature-based or can al...
The question whether multiple objects are selected serially or in parallel remains contentious. Prev...
Previous research has shown that when two colour-defined target objects appear in rapid succession a...
Previous work has demonstrated that when targets are defined by a constant feature, attention can be...
It is generally assumed that during search for targets defined by a feature conjunction, attention i...
Previous research has shown that when two color-defined target objects appear in rapid succession at...
Previous work has demonstrated that when targets are defined by a constant feature, attention can be...
It is generally assumed that during search for targets defined by a feature conjunction, attention i...
In real-life visual environments, where multiple objects compete for processing, new objects that re...
SummaryIn real-life visual environments, where multiple objects compete for processing, new objects ...
To investigate the time course of attentional object selection processes in visual search tasks wher...
To study whether top-down attentional control processes can be set simultaneously for different visu...
Finding target objects among distractors in visual search display is often assumed to be based on se...
Most investigations of visual search have focused on the discrimination between a search target and ...
The human brain recurrently prioritizes task-relevant over task-irrelevant visual information. A cen...
The question whether the control of attention during visual search is always feature-based or can al...
The question whether multiple objects are selected serially or in parallel remains contentious. Prev...
Previous research has shown that when two colour-defined target objects appear in rapid succession a...
Previous work has demonstrated that when targets are defined by a constant feature, attention can be...
It is generally assumed that during search for targets defined by a feature conjunction, attention i...
Previous research has shown that when two color-defined target objects appear in rapid succession at...
Previous work has demonstrated that when targets are defined by a constant feature, attention can be...
It is generally assumed that during search for targets defined by a feature conjunction, attention i...
In real-life visual environments, where multiple objects compete for processing, new objects that re...
SummaryIn real-life visual environments, where multiple objects compete for processing, new objects ...
To investigate the time course of attentional object selection processes in visual search tasks wher...
To study whether top-down attentional control processes can be set simultaneously for different visu...
Finding target objects among distractors in visual search display is often assumed to be based on se...
Most investigations of visual search have focused on the discrimination between a search target and ...
The human brain recurrently prioritizes task-relevant over task-irrelevant visual information. A cen...
The question whether the control of attention during visual search is always feature-based or can al...