Recent studies have argued that the statistical properties of a set of visual items can be extracted with little or even no cost. In the present study, observers (N = 188) performed a color task and an orientation task, and the attention effect was measured as the advantage of pre-cueing one of the two tasks. The color and orientation tasks required participants to report either an object feature or the mean of a 4×4 array (i.e., statistical property). The pre-cueing advantages were approximately equal regardless of the nature of the tasks (object features vs. statistical properties), providing evidence that statistical properties are not perceived with zero cost, but demand as much attention as object features
Directing attention to a specific feature of an object has been linked to different forms of attenti...
Weused a concurrent-task paradigm to investigate the attentional cost of simple visual tasks. As in ...
Decades of research suggest that selective attention is critical for binding the features of objects...
<div><p>Recent studies have argued that the statistical properties of a set of visual items can be e...
Recent studies have argued that the statistical properties of a set of visual items can be extracted...
<p>Panel A illustrates the same-cost account of the encoding of statistical properties: Attention ca...
<p>Panel A shows the observers’ accuracies in all 16 conditions. There were significant pre-cueing a...
Visual attention seems essential for learning the statistical regularities in our environment, a pro...
The present study investigated whether statistical regularities can influence visual selection. We u...
Allocation of attentional resources rests on predictions about the likelihood of events. While this ...
Two or more features belonging to a single object are identified more quickly and more accurately th...
Five experiments are reported from which it is concluded that attending on the basis of a stimulus f...
Contains fulltext : 207061.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Objects have a ...
In a complex visual environment, attention is important for the selection of relevant input for furt...
We used a concurrent-task paradigm to investigate the attentional cost of simple visual tasks. As in...
Directing attention to a specific feature of an object has been linked to different forms of attenti...
Weused a concurrent-task paradigm to investigate the attentional cost of simple visual tasks. As in ...
Decades of research suggest that selective attention is critical for binding the features of objects...
<div><p>Recent studies have argued that the statistical properties of a set of visual items can be e...
Recent studies have argued that the statistical properties of a set of visual items can be extracted...
<p>Panel A illustrates the same-cost account of the encoding of statistical properties: Attention ca...
<p>Panel A shows the observers’ accuracies in all 16 conditions. There were significant pre-cueing a...
Visual attention seems essential for learning the statistical regularities in our environment, a pro...
The present study investigated whether statistical regularities can influence visual selection. We u...
Allocation of attentional resources rests on predictions about the likelihood of events. While this ...
Two or more features belonging to a single object are identified more quickly and more accurately th...
Five experiments are reported from which it is concluded that attending on the basis of a stimulus f...
Contains fulltext : 207061.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Objects have a ...
In a complex visual environment, attention is important for the selection of relevant input for furt...
We used a concurrent-task paradigm to investigate the attentional cost of simple visual tasks. As in...
Directing attention to a specific feature of an object has been linked to different forms of attenti...
Weused a concurrent-task paradigm to investigate the attentional cost of simple visual tasks. As in ...
Decades of research suggest that selective attention is critical for binding the features of objects...