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Priming the semantic neighbourhood during the attentional blink

When two targets are presented in close temporal proximity amongst a rapid serial visual stream of distractors, a period of disrupted attention and attenuated awareness lasting 200-500 ms follows identification of the first target (T1). This phenomenon is known as the "attentional blink" (...

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Published in:PloS one 2010-09, Vol.5 (9), p.e12645-e12645
Main Authors: Harris, Irina M, Little, Michael J J
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description When two targets are presented in close temporal proximity amongst a rapid serial visual stream of distractors, a period of disrupted attention and attenuated awareness lasting 200-500 ms follows identification of the first target (T1). This phenomenon is known as the "attentional blink" (AB) and is generally attributed to a failure to consolidate information in visual short-term memory due to depleted or disrupted attentional resources. Previous research has shown that items presented during the AB that fail to reach conscious awareness are still processed to relatively high levels, including the level of meaning. For example, missed word stimuli have been shown to prime later targets that are closely associated words. Although these findings have been interpreted as evidence for semantic processing during the AB, closely associated words (e.g., day-night) may also rely on specific, well-worn, lexical associative links which enhance attention to the relevant target. We used a measure of semantic distance to create prime-target pairs that are conceptually close, but have low word associations (e.g., wagon and van) and investigated priming from a distractor stimulus presented during the AB to a subsequent target (T2). The stimuli were words (concrete nouns) in Experiment 1 and the corresponding pictures of objects in Experiment 2. In both experiments, report of T2 was facilitated when this item was preceded by a semantically-related distractor. This study is the first to show conclusively that conceptual information is extracted from distractor stimuli presented during a period of attenuated awareness and that this information spreads to neighbouring concepts within a semantic network.
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Antibodies
Attention
Attentional Blink
Awareness
Cognition & reasoning
Confidence intervals
Consciousness
Consolidation
Distributed processing
Experimental psychology
Female
Humans
Information dissemination
Information processing
Language
Male
Memory
Neuroscience/Cognitive Neuroscience
Neuroscience/Experimental Psychology
Neuroscience/Psychology
Pictures
Priming
Psychology
Rapid serial visual presentation
Research methodology
Residence Characteristics
Semantics
Short term memory
Stimuli
Studies
Target recognition
Young Adult
title Priming the semantic neighbourhood during the attentional blink
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