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Mechanisms of Visual-Spatial Attention: Resource Allocation or Uncertainty Reduction?

Many studies have found that stimuli can be discriminated more accurately at attended locations than at unattended locations, and such results have typically been taken as evidence for the hypothesis that attention operates by allocating limited perceptual processing resources to attended locations....

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Published in:Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance 1996-06, Vol.22 (3), p.725-737
Main Authors: Luck, Steven J, Hillyard, Steven A, Mouloua, Mustapha, Hawkins, Harold L
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Language:English
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container_title Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance
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creator Luck, Steven J
Hillyard, Steven A
Mouloua, Mustapha
Hawkins, Harold L
description Many studies have found that stimuli can be discriminated more accurately at attended locations than at unattended locations, and such results have typically been taken as evidence for the hypothesis that attention operates by allocating limited perceptual processing resources to attended locations. An alternative proposal, however, is that attention acts to reduce uncertainty about target location, thereby increasing accuracy by decreasing the number of noise sources. To distinguish between these alternatives, we conducted 6 spatial cuing experiments in which target location uncertainty was eliminated. Despite the absence of uncertainty, target discriminations were more accurate at the attended location, consistent with resource allocation models. These cue validity effects were observed under a broad range of conditions, including central and peripheral cuing, but were absent at very short cue-target delay intervals.
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ispartof Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance, 1996-06, Vol.22 (3), p.725-737
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); PsycARTICLES
subjects Attention
Cognition & reasoning
Color Perception
Contrast Sensitivity
Cues
Discrimination Learning
Electrooculography
Human
Human Channel Capacity
Humans
Mechanisms
Orientation
Practice (Psychology)
Psychology
Space Perception
Spatial Organization
Stimulus Onset
Uncertainty
Visual Discrimination
Visual Perception
Visual-Spatial attention
title Mechanisms of Visual-Spatial Attention: Resource Allocation or Uncertainty Reduction?
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