There now exists considerable evidence to suggest that the appearance of a new object in the visual field captures visual attention. One of the consequences of this attentional capture is that the object initiates a redistribution of attentional resources across visual space. This is classically observed in the precuing paradigm in which the onset of an abrupt cue influences the processing of a subsequently presented target. The present research describes a new phenomenon that occurs as a result of a new object appearing in the visual field. A stimulus presented in a region of space adjacent to a comer of an onsetting object receives an enhancement of processing relative to a stimulus presented adjacent to one of the object's straight edges...
My studies using gaze behavior and V1 activity showed that, as part of the object recognition proces...
The parvocellular visual pathway in the primate brain is known to be involved with the processing of...
137 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1999.Although the scene processing...
The present study addressed the question whether attentional capture by abrupt onsets is affected by...
A large body of work suggests that the visual system is particularly sensitive to the appearance of ...
In two experiments we examined whether the appearance of a new object has attentional priority over...
Three experiments were performed to investigate the distribution of attention across the visual fiel...
Free to read at publisher Onset primacy is a robust visual phenomenon in which appearance of new obj...
Attention has often been likened to spotlights and filters—devices that illuminate or screen out som...
Previous research using a spatial cuing paradigm in which a distractor cue preceded the target has s...
In solving the selection-for-action problem, it is believed that attentional mechanisms enable domin...
The relative efficacy with which appearance of a new object orients visual attention was investigate...
Do onsets automatically capture attention? Spatial-cuing experiments often reveal no capture by onse...
Attention directed to a part of an object tends to obligatorily spread over all of the spatial regio...
The effects of occlusion and past experience on the allocation of object-based attention It is well ...
My studies using gaze behavior and V1 activity showed that, as part of the object recognition proces...
The parvocellular visual pathway in the primate brain is known to be involved with the processing of...
137 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1999.Although the scene processing...
The present study addressed the question whether attentional capture by abrupt onsets is affected by...
A large body of work suggests that the visual system is particularly sensitive to the appearance of ...
In two experiments we examined whether the appearance of a new object has attentional priority over...
Three experiments were performed to investigate the distribution of attention across the visual fiel...
Free to read at publisher Onset primacy is a robust visual phenomenon in which appearance of new obj...
Attention has often been likened to spotlights and filters—devices that illuminate or screen out som...
Previous research using a spatial cuing paradigm in which a distractor cue preceded the target has s...
In solving the selection-for-action problem, it is believed that attentional mechanisms enable domin...
The relative efficacy with which appearance of a new object orients visual attention was investigate...
Do onsets automatically capture attention? Spatial-cuing experiments often reveal no capture by onse...
Attention directed to a part of an object tends to obligatorily spread over all of the spatial regio...
The effects of occlusion and past experience on the allocation of object-based attention It is well ...
My studies using gaze behavior and V1 activity showed that, as part of the object recognition proces...
The parvocellular visual pathway in the primate brain is known to be involved with the processing of...
137 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1999.Although the scene processing...