AbstractOlds, Cowan and Jolicoeur [2000. Tracking visual search over space and time. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review (in press)] interrupted pop-out search by adding distractors to a display after a delay. They analyzed the response time distributions from conditions with different delays for interruption and showed that when pop-out search fails, its partially completed computations can be used to assist other, slower search processes. This paper demonstrates that expectancies, numbers of items and colors in the display, and color onsets do not explain those results. Finally, an experiment in which the target was moved mid-trial demonstrates that partial pop-out assists difficult search by indicating something about where the target is, or w...
Acknowledgments This research is supported by a National Sciences and Engineering Research Council o...
In trouble-shooting, subjects choose the order in which they test hypotheses. This choice often invo...
Selection of a feature singleton target in visual search tasks, e.g., a red target among green distr...
AbstractOlds, Cowan and Jolicoeur [2000. Tracking visual search over space and time. Psychonomic Bul...
AbstractThe attentional mechanisms in the brain responsible for fast pop-out search and slower diffi...
Abstract Three experiments examined reaction time (RT) performance in visual pop-out search. Search ...
Pop-out search implies that the target is always the first item selected, no matter how many distrac...
Olds, Cowan and Jolicoeur (2000) showed that although the mechanisms underlying visual search have t...
Three experiments examined reaction time (RT) performance in visual pop-out search. Search displays ...
When something unique is present in a scene, this element may become immediately visible and one has...
AbstractPrevious behavioural studies have shown that the repetition of target or distractor features...
AbstractWe report three experiments investigating the time course of spreading suppression in visual...
AbstractWhen target-color repeats in pop-out visual search performance is faster than otherwise. Whi...
Dent, Humphreys, and Braithwaite (2011) showed substantial costs to search when a moving target shar...
hat po ials determined by the target’s saliency (i.e., local feature contrast). Here, we tested thes...
Acknowledgments This research is supported by a National Sciences and Engineering Research Council o...
In trouble-shooting, subjects choose the order in which they test hypotheses. This choice often invo...
Selection of a feature singleton target in visual search tasks, e.g., a red target among green distr...
AbstractOlds, Cowan and Jolicoeur [2000. Tracking visual search over space and time. Psychonomic Bul...
AbstractThe attentional mechanisms in the brain responsible for fast pop-out search and slower diffi...
Abstract Three experiments examined reaction time (RT) performance in visual pop-out search. Search ...
Pop-out search implies that the target is always the first item selected, no matter how many distrac...
Olds, Cowan and Jolicoeur (2000) showed that although the mechanisms underlying visual search have t...
Three experiments examined reaction time (RT) performance in visual pop-out search. Search displays ...
When something unique is present in a scene, this element may become immediately visible and one has...
AbstractPrevious behavioural studies have shown that the repetition of target or distractor features...
AbstractWe report three experiments investigating the time course of spreading suppression in visual...
AbstractWhen target-color repeats in pop-out visual search performance is faster than otherwise. Whi...
Dent, Humphreys, and Braithwaite (2011) showed substantial costs to search when a moving target shar...
hat po ials determined by the target’s saliency (i.e., local feature contrast). Here, we tested thes...
Acknowledgments This research is supported by a National Sciences and Engineering Research Council o...
In trouble-shooting, subjects choose the order in which they test hypotheses. This choice often invo...
Selection of a feature singleton target in visual search tasks, e.g., a red target among green distr...