How do we select behaviourally important information from cluttered visual environments? Previous research has shown that both top-down, goal-driven factors and bottom-up, stimulus-driven factors determine which stimuli are selected. However, it is still debated when top-down processes modulate visual selection. According to a feedforward account, top-down processes modulate visual processing even before the appearance of any stimuli, whereas others claim that top-down processes modulate visual selection only at a late stage, via feedback processing. In line with such a dual stage account, some studies found that eye movements to an irrelevant onset distractor are not modulated by its similarity to the target stimulus, especially when eye m...
Motivation: Attentional allocation is determined by the interplay between bottom-up and top-down in...
© 2013 Dr. Ashika VergheseVisual attention allows the brain to selectively process only what is rele...
Our ability to process visual information is fundamentally limited. This leads to competition betwee...
Two experiments were conducted to investigate the capture of attention by suddenly appearing items (...
Visual selective attention is known to be guided by stimulus-based (bottom-up) and goal-oriented (to...
During early visual processing the eyes can be captured by salient visual information in the environ...
An established view of attention is that it acts by biasing the competition between rival representa...
During early visual processing the eyes can be captured by salient visual information in the environ...
During early visual processing the eyes can be captured by salient visual information in the environ...
During early visual processing the eyes can be captured by salient visual information in the environ...
During early visual processing the eyes can be captured by salient visual information in the environ...
Abstract During early visual processing the eyes can be captured by salient visual information in th...
Becker SI, Grubert A, Horstmann G, Ansorge U. Which processes dominate visual search: Bottom-up feat...
Do onsets automatically capture attention? Spatial-cuing experiments often reveal no capture by onse...
Is attentional capture contingent on top-down control settings or involuntarily driven by salient st...
Motivation: Attentional allocation is determined by the interplay between bottom-up and top-down in...
© 2013 Dr. Ashika VergheseVisual attention allows the brain to selectively process only what is rele...
Our ability to process visual information is fundamentally limited. This leads to competition betwee...
Two experiments were conducted to investigate the capture of attention by suddenly appearing items (...
Visual selective attention is known to be guided by stimulus-based (bottom-up) and goal-oriented (to...
During early visual processing the eyes can be captured by salient visual information in the environ...
An established view of attention is that it acts by biasing the competition between rival representa...
During early visual processing the eyes can be captured by salient visual information in the environ...
During early visual processing the eyes can be captured by salient visual information in the environ...
During early visual processing the eyes can be captured by salient visual information in the environ...
During early visual processing the eyes can be captured by salient visual information in the environ...
Abstract During early visual processing the eyes can be captured by salient visual information in th...
Becker SI, Grubert A, Horstmann G, Ansorge U. Which processes dominate visual search: Bottom-up feat...
Do onsets automatically capture attention? Spatial-cuing experiments often reveal no capture by onse...
Is attentional capture contingent on top-down control settings or involuntarily driven by salient st...
Motivation: Attentional allocation is determined by the interplay between bottom-up and top-down in...
© 2013 Dr. Ashika VergheseVisual attention allows the brain to selectively process only what is rele...
Our ability to process visual information is fundamentally limited. This leads to competition betwee...