Healthy subjects were tested in two experiments to examine the effects of lateralized cues on line bisection and landmark judgments. The studies were designed to investigate whether bisection and landmark biases induced by cueing are simply a result of a direct perceptual lengthening of the cued part of the line caused by the fact that the cue is visible, thus creating a composite 'line plus cue' or whether cueing induces an attentional bias operating on judgments of spatial extent by either reducing the magnitude of the parts of the stimulus receiving 'less' attention or magnifying those parts receiving 'more'. Lateralized cues were either visible letter cues or invisible marks drawn with a leadless pencil either by the subject him/herself...
The original aim was to examine the effect of perceived distance, induced by the Ponzo illusion, on ...
The direction of attentional bias in forty normal adults was assessed using a computer generated lin...
Neurologically healthy participants systematically misbisect horizontal lines to the left of centre,...
Healthy subjects were tested in two experiments to examine the effects of lateralized cues on line b...
A total of 12 patients with hemispatial neglect (and two control groups) were tested to examine the ...
Normal adults were tested in a series of three experiments to examine the influences of spatial loca...
AbstractThe present experiments indicate that in a 7-AFC double judgment accuracy task with unmasked...
In patients with right brain damage and left visual neglect, attention tends to be captured by right...
AbstractRecent research has demonstrated that involuntary attention improves target identification a...
One patient with left spatial neglect (FM) and four right-brain damaged controls without neglect wer...
AbstractExogenous spatial attention can be automatically engaged by a cue presented in the visual pe...
In the present study we investigated whether masking/perceptual factors may influence line bisection...
There is an upward bias in bisecting radial and vertical lines under visual guidance. We investigate...
Perceptual attention in healthy participants is characterized by two biases, one operating in the ho...
The original aim was to examine the effect of perceived distance, induced by the Ponzo illusion, on ...
The original aim was to examine the effect of perceived distance, induced by the Ponzo illusion, on ...
The direction of attentional bias in forty normal adults was assessed using a computer generated lin...
Neurologically healthy participants systematically misbisect horizontal lines to the left of centre,...
Healthy subjects were tested in two experiments to examine the effects of lateralized cues on line b...
A total of 12 patients with hemispatial neglect (and two control groups) were tested to examine the ...
Normal adults were tested in a series of three experiments to examine the influences of spatial loca...
AbstractThe present experiments indicate that in a 7-AFC double judgment accuracy task with unmasked...
In patients with right brain damage and left visual neglect, attention tends to be captured by right...
AbstractRecent research has demonstrated that involuntary attention improves target identification a...
One patient with left spatial neglect (FM) and four right-brain damaged controls without neglect wer...
AbstractExogenous spatial attention can be automatically engaged by a cue presented in the visual pe...
In the present study we investigated whether masking/perceptual factors may influence line bisection...
There is an upward bias in bisecting radial and vertical lines under visual guidance. We investigate...
Perceptual attention in healthy participants is characterized by two biases, one operating in the ho...
The original aim was to examine the effect of perceived distance, induced by the Ponzo illusion, on ...
The original aim was to examine the effect of perceived distance, induced by the Ponzo illusion, on ...
The direction of attentional bias in forty normal adults was assessed using a computer generated lin...
Neurologically healthy participants systematically misbisect horizontal lines to the left of centre,...