The relatively common experimental visual search task of finding a red X amongst red O's and green X's (conjunction search) presents the visual system with a binding problem. Illusory conjunctions (ICs) of features across objects must be avoided and only features present in the same object bound together. Correct binding into unique objects by the visual system may be promoted, and ICs minimized, by inhibiting the locations of distractors possessing non-target features (e.g., Treisman and Sato, 1990). Such parallel rejection of interfering distractors leaves the target as the only item competing for selection; thus solving the binding problem. In the present article we explore the theoretical and empirical basis of this process of active di...
In three experiments, we examined distractor inhibition in parallel ("pop-out") visual search. Distr...
Visual search is the task of finding a target among distractors. When the target has a feature that ...
The hypothesis that salient distractors in visual search are actively suppressed is supported by the...
The relatively common experimental visual search task of finding a red X amongst red O's and green X...
Search for a target defined by a conjunction of movement and shape (a moving X amongst moving O and ...
Dent, Humphreys, and Braithwaite (2011) showed substantial costs to search when a moving target shar...
How do we find a target object in a cluttered visual scene? Targets carrying unique salient features...
Olds, Cowan and Jolicoeur (2000) showed that although the mechanisms underlying visual search have t...
Observers can learn the likely locations of salient distractors in visual search, reducing their pot...
The thesis investigates the inhibitory processes of visual selection across time. While distractor i...
AbstractThe attentional mechanisms in the brain responsible for fast pop-out search and slower diffi...
Brain-damaged subjects who had previously been identified as suffering from a visual attention defic...
We review research from our laboratory that attempts to pull apart the functional and neural mechani...
In preview search when an observer ignores an early appearing set of distractors, there can subseque...
Hulleman & Olivers reject item-based serial models of visual search, and suggest that items are proc...
In three experiments, we examined distractor inhibition in parallel ("pop-out") visual search. Distr...
Visual search is the task of finding a target among distractors. When the target has a feature that ...
The hypothesis that salient distractors in visual search are actively suppressed is supported by the...
The relatively common experimental visual search task of finding a red X amongst red O's and green X...
Search for a target defined by a conjunction of movement and shape (a moving X amongst moving O and ...
Dent, Humphreys, and Braithwaite (2011) showed substantial costs to search when a moving target shar...
How do we find a target object in a cluttered visual scene? Targets carrying unique salient features...
Olds, Cowan and Jolicoeur (2000) showed that although the mechanisms underlying visual search have t...
Observers can learn the likely locations of salient distractors in visual search, reducing their pot...
The thesis investigates the inhibitory processes of visual selection across time. While distractor i...
AbstractThe attentional mechanisms in the brain responsible for fast pop-out search and slower diffi...
Brain-damaged subjects who had previously been identified as suffering from a visual attention defic...
We review research from our laboratory that attempts to pull apart the functional and neural mechani...
In preview search when an observer ignores an early appearing set of distractors, there can subseque...
Hulleman & Olivers reject item-based serial models of visual search, and suggest that items are proc...
In three experiments, we examined distractor inhibition in parallel ("pop-out") visual search. Distr...
Visual search is the task of finding a target among distractors. When the target has a feature that ...
The hypothesis that salient distractors in visual search are actively suppressed is supported by the...