journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33100883/selection-history-driven-signal-suppression
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Brian A Anderson, Andy Jeesu Kim
The control of attention is influenced by current goals, physical salience, and selection history. Under certain conditions, physically salient stimuli can be strategically suppressed below baseline levels, facilitating visual search for a target. It is unclear whether such signal suppression is a broad mechanism of selective information processing that extends to other sources of attentional priority evoked by task-irrelevant stimuli, or whether it is particular to physically salient perceptual signals. Using eye movements, in the present study we highlight a case where a former-target-color distractor facilitates search for a target on a large percentage of trials...
2020: Visual Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33013176/working-memory-driven-attention-towards-a-distractor-does-not-interfere-with-target-feature-perception
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emma Wu Dowd, Samoni Nag, Julie D Golomb
The contents of working memory (WM) can influence where we attend-but can it also interfere with what we see? Active maintenance of visual items in WM biases attention towards WM-matching objects, and also enhances early perceptual processing of WM-matching items (e.g., more accurate perceptual discrimination). Here, we asked whether a WM-matching distractor interferes with perceptual processing of a target's features. In a dual-task paradigm, participants maintained a shape in WM across an intervening visual search task, during which they had to reproduce the colour of a designated target item using a continuous-report technique...
2019: Visual Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32982562/learned-feature-variance-is-encoded-in-the-target-template-and-drives-visual-search
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Phillip Witkowski, Joy J Geng
Real world visual search targets are frequently imperfect perceptual matches to our internal target templates. For example, the same friend on different occasions is likely to wear different clothes, hairstyles, and accessories, but some of these may be more likely to vary than others. The ability to deal with template-to-target variability is important to visual search in natural environments, but we know relatively little about how feature variability is handled by the attentional system. In these studies, we test the hypothesis that top-down attentional biases are sensitive to the variance of target feature dimensions over time and prioritize information from less-variable dimensions...
2019: Visual Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32982561/selective-influence-and-sequential-operations-a-research-strategy-for-visual-search
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kaleb A Lowe, Thomas R Reppert, Jeffrey D Schall
We discuss the problem of elucidating mechanisms of visual search. We begin by considering the history, logic, and methods of relating behavioral or cognitive processes with neural processes. We then survey briefly the cognitive neurophysiology of visual search and essential aspects of the neural circuitry supporting this capacity. We introduce conceptually and empirically a powerful but underutilized experimental approach to dissect the cognitive processes supporting performance of a visual search task with factorial manipulations of singleton-distractor identifiability and stimulus-response cue discriminability...
2019: Visual Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32952433/quantifying-the-attentional-impact-of-working-memory-matching-targets-and-distractors
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nancy B Carlisle, Geoffrey F Woodman
Various theoretical proposals have been put forward to explain how memory representations control attention during visual search. In this study, we use the first saccade on each trial as away to quantify the attentional impact of multiple types of representations held in working memory. Across two experiments, we found that a search target maintained in working memory was attended over 20 times more frequently than a non-memory-matching distractor. In addition, an item matching an additional object represented in working memory was attended 2 times more frequently than a non-memory matching distractor...
2019: Visual Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31745389/oculomotor-inhibition-of-salient-distractors-voluntary-inhibition-cannot-override-selection-history
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nicholas Gaspelin, John M Gaspar, Steven J Luck
Several studies have demonstrated that salient distractors can be proactively inhibited to prevent attentional capture. Traditional theories frame attentional guidance effects such as this in terms of explicit goals. However, several researchers have recently argued that that unconscious factors-such as the features of attended and ignored items on previous trials (called selection history )-play a stronger role in guiding attention and can overpower explicit goals. The current study assessed whether voluntary inhibition can overpower selection history...
2019: Visual Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31602175/size-and-orientation-cue-figure-ground-segregation-in-infants
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Paul C Quinn, Ramesh S Bhatt
Adult perceivers segregate figure from ground based on image cues such as small size and main axis orientation. The current study examined whether infants can use such cues to perceive figure-ground segregation. Three- to 7-month-olds were familiarized with a pie-shaped stimulus in which some pieces formed a + and other pieces formed an x. The infants were then presented with a novelty preference test pairing the + and x. The bases for the pieces forming the + or x were size and orientation (Experiment 1), size (Experiment 2), and orientation (Experiment 3)...
2018: Visual Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31447601/dichotomous-perception-of-animal-categories-in-infancy
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hannah White, Rachel Jubran, Alyson Chroust, Alison Heck, Ramesh S Bhatt
Although there is a wealth of knowledge on categorization early in life, there are still many unanswered questions about the nature of category representation in infancy. For example, it is unclear whether infants are sensitive to boundaries between complex categories, such as types of animals, or whether young infants exhibit such sensitivity without explicit experience in the lab. Using a morphing technique, we linearly altered the category composition of images and measured 6.5-month-olds' attention to pairs of animal faces that either did or did not cross the categorical boundary, with the stimuli in each pair being equally dissimilar from one another across the two types of image pairs...
2018: Visual Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30906199/target-localization-after-saccades-and-at-fixation-nontargets-both-facilitate-and-bias-responses
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Xiaoli Zhang, Julie D Golomb
The image on our retina changes every time we make an eye movement. To maintain visual stability after saccades, specifically to locate visual targets, we may use nontarget objects as "landmarks". In the current study, we compared how the presence of nontargets affects target localization after saccades and during sustained fixation. Participants fixated a target object, which either maintained its location on the screen (sustained-fixation trials), or displaced to trigger a saccade (saccade trials)...
2018: Visual Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30828706/saccades-predict-and-synchronize-to-visual-rhythms-irrespective-of-musical-beats
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jonathan P Batten, Tim J Smith
Music has been shown to entrain movement. One of the body's most frequent movements, saccades, are arguably subject to a timer that may also be susceptible to musical entrainment. We developed a continuous and highly-controlled visual search task and varied the timing of the search target presentation, it was either gaze-contingent, tap-contingent, or visually-timed. We found: (1) explicit control of saccadic timing is limited to gross duration variations and imprecisely synchronized; (2) saccadic timing does not implicitly entrain to musical beats, even when closely aligned in phase; (3) eye movements predict visual onsets produced by motor-movements (finger-taps) and externally-timed sequences, beginning fixation prior to visual onset; (4) eye movement timing can be rhythmic, synchronizing to both motor-produced and externally timed visual sequences; each unaffected by musical beats...
2018: Visual Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30370428/are-you-with-me-probing-the-human-capacity-to-recognize-external-internal-attention-in-others-faces
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mathias Benedek, David Daxberger, Sonja Annerer-Walcher, Jonathan Smallwood
Facial cues provide information about affective states and the direction of attention that is important for human social interaction. The present study examined how this capacity extends to judging whether attention is internally or externally directed. Participants evaluated a set of videos and images showing the face of people focused externally on a task, or internally while they performed a task in imagination. We found that participants could identify the focus of attention above chance in videos, and to a lesser degree in static images, but only when the eye region was visible...
2018: Visual Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30760947/keeping-track-of-where-we-are-spatial-working-memory-in-navigation
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kara J Blacker, Steven M Weisberg, Nora S Newcombe, Susan M Courtney
Spatial working memory (WM) seems to include two types of spatial information, locations and relations. However, this distinction has been based on small-scale tasks. Here, we used a virtual navigation paradigm to examine whether WM for locations and relations applies to the large-scale spatial world. We found that navigators who successfully learned two routes and also integrated them were superior at maintaining multiple locations and multiple relations in WM. However, over the entire spectrum of navigators, WM for spatial relations, but not locations, was specifically predictive of route integration performance...
2017: Visual Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30555267/2d-location-biases-depth-from-disparity-judgments-but-not-vice-versa
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nonie J Finlayson, Julie D Golomb
Visual cognition in our 3D world requires understanding how we accurately localize objects in 2D and depth, and what influence both types of location information have on visual processing. Spatial location is known to play a special role in visual processing, but most of these findings have focused on the special role of 2D location. One such phenomena is the spatial congruency bias (Golomb, Kupitz, & Thiemann, 2014), where 2D location biases judgments of object features but features do not bias location judgments...
2017: Visual Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30464702/hemispheric-organization-in-disorders-of-development
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elliot Collins, Eva Dundas, Yafit Gabay, David C Plaut, Marlene Behrmann
A recent theoretical account posits that, during the acquisition of word recognition in childhood, the pressure to couple visual and language representations in the left hemisphere (LH) results in competition with the LH representation of faces, which consequently become largely, albeit not exclusively, lateralized to the right hemisphere (RH). We explore predictions from this hypothesis using a hemifield behavioral paradigm with words and faces as stimuli, with concurrent ERP measurement, in a group of adults with developmental dyslexia (DD) or with congenital prosopagnosia (CP), and matched control participants...
2017: Visual Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29238759/neuropsychological-evidence-for-the-temporal-dynamics-of-category-specific-naming
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sven Panis, Katrien Torfs, Celine R Gillebert, Johan Wagemans, Glyn W Humphreys
Multiple accounts have been proposed to explain category-specific recognition impairments. Some suggest that category-specific deficits may be caused by a deficit in recurrent processing between the levels of a hierarchically organized visual object recognition system. Here, we tested predictions of interactive processing theories on the emergence of category-selective naming deficits in neurologically intact observers and in patient GA, a single case showing a category-specific impairment for natural objects after a herpes simplex encephalitis infection...
2017: Visual Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27570471/selective-scanpath-repetition-during-memory-guided-visual-search
#36
Jordana S Wynn, Michael B Bone, Michelle C Dragan, Kari L Hoffman, Bradley R Buchsbaum, Jennifer D Ryan
Visual search efficiency improves with repetition of a search display, yet the mechanisms behind these processing gains remain unclear. According to Scanpath Theory, memory retrieval is mediated by repetition of the pattern of eye movements or "scanpath" elicited during stimulus encoding. Using this framework, we tested the prediction that scanpath recapitulation reflects relational memory guidance during repeated search events. Younger and older subjects were instructed to find changing targets within flickering naturalistic scenes...
January 2, 2016: Visual Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30881195/assessing-the-evidence-for-a-cue-induced-trade-off-between-capacity-and-precision-in-visual-working-memory-using-mixture-modelling-and-bayesian-model-comparison
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andrea Bocincova, Amanda E van Lamsweerde, Jeffrey S Johnson
There is considerable debate regarding the ability to trade mnemonic precision for capacity in working memory (WM), with some studies reporting evidence consistent with such a trade-off and others suggesting it may not be possible. The majority of studies addressing this question have utilized a standard approach to analyzing continuous recall data in which individual-subject data from each experimental condition is fitted with a probabilistic model of choice. Estimated parameter values related to different aspects of WM (e...
2016: Visual Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28255263/ultrafast-scene-detection-and-recognition-with-limited-visual-information
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Carl Erick Hagmann, Mary C Potter
Humans can detect target color pictures of scenes depicting concepts like picnic or harbor in sequences of six or twelve pictures presented as briefly as 13 ms, even when the target is named after the sequence (Potter, Wyble, Hagmann, & McCourt, 2014). Such rapid detection suggests that feedforward processing alone enabled detection without recurrent cortical feedback. There is debate about whether coarse, global, low spatial frequencies (LSFs) provide predictive information to high cortical levels through the rapid magnocellular (M) projection of the visual path, enabling top-down prediction of possible object identities...
2016: Visual Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28154496/modelling-individual-difference-in-visual-categorization
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jianhong Shen, Thomas J Palmeri
Recent years has seen growing interest in understanding, characterizing, and explaining individual differences in visual cognition. We focus here on individual differences in visual categorization. Categorization is the fundamental visual ability to group different objects together as the same kind of thing. Research on visual categorization and category learning has been significantly informed by computational modeling, so our review will focus both on how formal models of visual categorization have captured individual differences and how individual difference have informed the development of formal models...
2016: Visual Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/27478399/dissociable-behavioural-outcomes-of-visual-statistical-learning
#40
Brett C Bays, Nicholas B Turk-Browne, Aaron R Seitz
Statistical learning refers to the extraction of probabilistic relationships between stimuli and is increasingly used as a method to understand learning processes. However, numerous cognitive processes are sensitive to the statistical relationships between stimuli and any one measure of learning may conflate these processes; to date little research has focused on differentiating these processes. To understand how multiple processes underlie statistical learning, here we compared, within the same study, operational measures of learning from different tasks that may be differentially sensitive to these processes...
2016: Visual Cognition
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