Positions priming in briefly presented search arrays

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftKonferenceabstrakt i tidsskriftForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Positions priming in briefly presented search arrays. / Asgeirsson, Arni Gunnar; Kristjánsson, Árni; Kyllingsbæk, Søren; Fjóla Hrólsfdóttir, Kristbjörg; Hafþórsdóttir, Heiðrún; Bundesen, Claus.

I: Perception, Bind 40, Nr. supplement, 2011, s. 109-109.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftKonferenceabstrakt i tidsskriftForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Asgeirsson, AG, Kristjánsson, Á, Kyllingsbæk, S, Fjóla Hrólsfdóttir, K, Hafþórsdóttir, H & Bundesen, C 2011, 'Positions priming in briefly presented search arrays', Perception, bind 40, nr. supplement, s. 109-109. <http://www.perceptionweb.com/abstract.cgi?id=v110415>

APA

Asgeirsson, A. G., Kristjánsson, Á., Kyllingsbæk, S., Fjóla Hrólsfdóttir, K., Hafþórsdóttir, H., & Bundesen, C. (2011). Positions priming in briefly presented search arrays. Perception, 40(supplement), 109-109. http://www.perceptionweb.com/abstract.cgi?id=v110415

Vancouver

Asgeirsson AG, Kristjánsson Á, Kyllingsbæk S, Fjóla Hrólsfdóttir K, Hafþórsdóttir H, Bundesen C. Positions priming in briefly presented search arrays. Perception. 2011;40(supplement):109-109.

Author

Asgeirsson, Arni Gunnar ; Kristjánsson, Árni ; Kyllingsbæk, Søren ; Fjóla Hrólsfdóttir, Kristbjörg ; Hafþórsdóttir, Heiðrún ; Bundesen, Claus. / Positions priming in briefly presented search arrays. I: Perception. 2011 ; Bind 40, Nr. supplement. s. 109-109.

Bibtex

@article{45e33cc887664c63bd8fd18517f357e6,
title = "Positions priming in briefly presented search arrays",
abstract = "Repetition priming in visual search has been a topic of extensive research since Maljkovic & Nakayama [1994, Memory & Cognition, 22, 657-672] presented the first detailed studies of such effects. Their results showed large reductions in reaction times when target color was repeated on consecutive pop-out search trials. Such repetition effects have since been generalized to a multitude of target attributes. Priming has primarily been investigated using self-terminating visual search paradigms, comparing differences in response times. Response accuracy has predominantly served as a control variable. Here we present results from experiments where position priming is demonstrated in paradigms involving temporally limited exposures to singleton targets. Position priming of response accuracy was observed in an eye-movement-controlled spatial judgment task and in partial report tasks where the targets are oddly colored alphanumeric characters. The effects arise at very low exposure durations and benefit accuracy at all exposure durations towards the subjects{\textquoteright} ceiling. We conclude that temporally constricted experimental conditions can add to our understanding priming in visual search. The accuracy-based response mode allows for probabilistic modeling of data. Here we use the TVA-framework [Bundesen, 1990, Psychological Review, 97, 523-547] as the basis for modeling. ",
author = "Asgeirsson, {Arni Gunnar} and {\'A}rni Kristj{\'a}nsson and S{\o}ren Kyllingsb{\ae}k and {Fj{\'o}la Hr{\'o}lsfd{\'o}ttir}, Kristbj{\"o}rg and Hei{\dh}r{\'u}n Haf{\th}{\'o}rsd{\'o}ttir and Claus Bundesen",
year = "2011",
language = "English",
volume = "40",
pages = "109--109",
journal = "Perception",
issn = "0301-0066",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "supplement",
note = "null ; Conference date: 08-08-2011",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Positions priming in briefly presented search arrays

AU - Asgeirsson, Arni Gunnar

AU - Kristjánsson, Árni

AU - Kyllingsbæk, Søren

AU - Fjóla Hrólsfdóttir, Kristbjörg

AU - Hafþórsdóttir, Heiðrún

AU - Bundesen, Claus

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - Repetition priming in visual search has been a topic of extensive research since Maljkovic & Nakayama [1994, Memory & Cognition, 22, 657-672] presented the first detailed studies of such effects. Their results showed large reductions in reaction times when target color was repeated on consecutive pop-out search trials. Such repetition effects have since been generalized to a multitude of target attributes. Priming has primarily been investigated using self-terminating visual search paradigms, comparing differences in response times. Response accuracy has predominantly served as a control variable. Here we present results from experiments where position priming is demonstrated in paradigms involving temporally limited exposures to singleton targets. Position priming of response accuracy was observed in an eye-movement-controlled spatial judgment task and in partial report tasks where the targets are oddly colored alphanumeric characters. The effects arise at very low exposure durations and benefit accuracy at all exposure durations towards the subjects’ ceiling. We conclude that temporally constricted experimental conditions can add to our understanding priming in visual search. The accuracy-based response mode allows for probabilistic modeling of data. Here we use the TVA-framework [Bundesen, 1990, Psychological Review, 97, 523-547] as the basis for modeling.

AB - Repetition priming in visual search has been a topic of extensive research since Maljkovic & Nakayama [1994, Memory & Cognition, 22, 657-672] presented the first detailed studies of such effects. Their results showed large reductions in reaction times when target color was repeated on consecutive pop-out search trials. Such repetition effects have since been generalized to a multitude of target attributes. Priming has primarily been investigated using self-terminating visual search paradigms, comparing differences in response times. Response accuracy has predominantly served as a control variable. Here we present results from experiments where position priming is demonstrated in paradigms involving temporally limited exposures to singleton targets. Position priming of response accuracy was observed in an eye-movement-controlled spatial judgment task and in partial report tasks where the targets are oddly colored alphanumeric characters. The effects arise at very low exposure durations and benefit accuracy at all exposure durations towards the subjects’ ceiling. We conclude that temporally constricted experimental conditions can add to our understanding priming in visual search. The accuracy-based response mode allows for probabilistic modeling of data. Here we use the TVA-framework [Bundesen, 1990, Psychological Review, 97, 523-547] as the basis for modeling.

M3 - Conference abstract in journal

VL - 40

SP - 109

EP - 109

JO - Perception

JF - Perception

SN - 0301-0066

IS - supplement

Y2 - 8 August 2011

ER -

ID: 34315650