We investigated the basis of change detection in a short-term priming task. In two experiments, participants were asked to indicate whether or not a target word was the same as a previously presented cue. Data from an experiment measuring magnetoencephalography failed to find different patterns for “same” and “different” responses, consistent with the claim that both arise from a common neural source, with response magnitude defining the difference between immediate novelty versus familiarity. In a behavioral experiment, we tested and confirmed the predictions of a habituation account of these judgments by comparing conditions in which the target, the cue, or neither was primed by its presentation in the previous trial. As predicted, cue-pr...
Habituation is defined as a decline in responding to a repeated stimulus. After more than 80 years o...
People are able to respond more quickly to stimuli following a recent encounter with those same item...
Background: Previous studies have found that the processing of repeated targets are easier than th...
We investigated the basis of change detection in a short-term priming task. In two experiments, part...
Many cognitive theories explain task-specific behaviors without reference to neural mechanisms. Howe...
The phenomenon of change blindness reveals that people are surprisingly poor at detecting unexpected...
The ability to perceive a change in a visual object is reduced when that change is presented in comp...
Although change detection constitutes an important and pervasive process in our everyday lives, phen...
Why do we notice one thing but not another? Why does one person see something that another does not...
AbstractRepetition priming refers to the change in the ability to perform a task on a stimulus as a ...
The human mind rapidly parses high-dimensional dynamic input into useful representations. Identifyin...
Humans flexibly weight incoming evidence when updating beliefs and adjusting behavior. In the curren...
Repetition suppression is generally accepted as the neural correlate of behavioural priming and is o...
The relationship between recognition memory and repetition priming remains unclear. Priming is belie...
Five experiments explored the effects of immediate repetition priming on episodic recognition (the “...
Habituation is defined as a decline in responding to a repeated stimulus. After more than 80 years o...
People are able to respond more quickly to stimuli following a recent encounter with those same item...
Background: Previous studies have found that the processing of repeated targets are easier than th...
We investigated the basis of change detection in a short-term priming task. In two experiments, part...
Many cognitive theories explain task-specific behaviors without reference to neural mechanisms. Howe...
The phenomenon of change blindness reveals that people are surprisingly poor at detecting unexpected...
The ability to perceive a change in a visual object is reduced when that change is presented in comp...
Although change detection constitutes an important and pervasive process in our everyday lives, phen...
Why do we notice one thing but not another? Why does one person see something that another does not...
AbstractRepetition priming refers to the change in the ability to perform a task on a stimulus as a ...
The human mind rapidly parses high-dimensional dynamic input into useful representations. Identifyin...
Humans flexibly weight incoming evidence when updating beliefs and adjusting behavior. In the curren...
Repetition suppression is generally accepted as the neural correlate of behavioural priming and is o...
The relationship between recognition memory and repetition priming remains unclear. Priming is belie...
Five experiments explored the effects of immediate repetition priming on episodic recognition (the “...
Habituation is defined as a decline in responding to a repeated stimulus. After more than 80 years o...
People are able to respond more quickly to stimuli following a recent encounter with those same item...
Background: Previous studies have found that the processing of repeated targets are easier than th...