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Kruger, Hannah M.; Hunt, Amelia R. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2013
Responses are slower to targets appearing in recently inspected locations, an effect known as Inhibition of Return (IOR). IOR is typically viewed as the consequence of an involuntary mechanism that prevents reinspection of previously visited locations and thereby biases attention toward novel locations during visual search. For an inhibitory…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Inhibition, Prediction, Role
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Shaki, Samuel; Petrusic, William M.; Leth-Steensen, Craig – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
With English-language readers in an experiment requiring pairwise comparative judgments of the sizes of animals, the nature of the association between the magnitudes of the animal pairs and the left or right sides of response (i.e., the SNARC effect) was reversed depending on whether the participants had to choose either the smaller or the larger…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Cognitive Processes, Numbers, Comparative Analysis
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Zehetleitner, Michael; Goschy, Harriet; Muller, Hermann J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
When searching for a "pop-out" target, interference from a salient but irrelevant distractor can be reduced or even prevented under certain circumstances. Here, five experiments were conducted to further our understanding of three different aspects of top-down interference reduction: first, whether or not qualitatively different search modes can…
Descriptors: Attention Control, Attention, Experiments, Reaction Time
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Marotta, Andrea; Lupianez, Juan; Martella, Diana; Casagrande, Maria – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
This study aimed to evaluate the type of attentional selection (location- and/or object-based) triggered by two different types of central noninformative cues: eye gaze and arrows. Two rectangular objects were presented in the visual field, and subjects' attention was directed to the end of a rectangle via the observation of noninformative…
Descriptors: Theory of Mind, Cues, Eye Movements, Spatial Ability
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Frings, Christian; Amendt, Anna; Spence, Charles – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2011
Negative priming (NP) refers to the finding that people's responses to probe targets previously presented as prime distractors are usually slower than to unrepeated stimuli. Intriguingly, the effect sizes of tactile NP were much larger than the effect sizes for visual NP. We analyzed whether the large tactile NP effect is just a side effect of the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Adults, Blindness, Priming
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Calvin, Sarah; Huys, Raoul; Jirsa, Viktor K. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2010
Simultaneously executed limb movements interfere with each other. Whereas the interference between discrete movements is examined mostly from a cognitive perspective, that between rhythmic movements is studied mainly from a dynamical systems perspective. As the tools and concepts developed by both communities are limited in their applicability to…
Descriptors: Reaction Time, Psychomotor Skills, Movement Education, Perceptual Motor Coordination
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Pitt, Mark A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2009
Spoken words undergo frequent and often predictable variation in pronunciation. One form of variation is medial /t/ deletion, in which words like "center" and "cantaloupe" are pronounced without acoustic cues indicative of syllable-initial /t/. Three experiments examined the consequences of this missing phonetic information on lexical activation.…
Descriptors: Cues, Reaction Time, Cognitive Processes, Pronunciation
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Watson, Derrick G.; Maylor, Elizabeth A.; Bruce, Lucy A. M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2007
Previous work has suggested that eye movements may be necessary for accurate enumeration beyond the subitization range of about 4 items. This study determined the frequency of eye movements normally made during enumeration, their relationship to response times, and whether they are required for accurate performance. This was achieved by monitoring…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Computation, Cognitive Processes, Reaction Time
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Krueger, Lester E. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1979
A uniprocessor, unidimensional model, based on Krueger's noisy-operator theory, was fitted satisfactorily to data from four published studies of tone comparison. The model predicts faster response time on different judgments because of heterogeneity of difference. (Author/CP)
Descriptors: Auditory Discrimination, Auditory Perception, Auditory Stimuli, Cognitive Processes