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A glimpse is not a glimpse: Differential processing of flashed scene previews leads to differential target search benefits
Authors:Melissa L.-H. Võ  Werner X. Schneider
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology , Ludwig-Maximilians-Universit?t München , Germany;2. Psychology Department , University of Edinburgh , UK melissa.vo@ed.ac.uk;4. Department of Psychology , Ludwig-Maximilians-Universit?t München;5. Department of Psychology , Bielefeld University , Germany
Abstract:The question of whether words can be identified without spatial attention has been a topic of considerable interest over the last five and a half decades, but the literature has yielded mixed conclusions. The present experiments manipulated the proportion of valid trials (the proportion of trials in which a cue appeared in the same location as the upcoming target word) so as to encourage distributed (50% valid cues; Experiments 1 and 3) or focused (100% valid cues; Experiments 2 and 4) spatial attention in a priming-type paradigm. Participants read aloud a target word, and the impact of a simultaneously presented distractor word was assessed. Semantic and orthographic priming effects were present when conditions promoted distributed spatial attention but absent when conditions promoted focused spatial attention. In contrast, Experiment 5 yielded a distractor word effect in the 100% valid cue condition when subjects identified a colour (Stroop task). We take these results to suggest that (1) spatial attention is a necessary preliminary to visual word recognition and (2) examining the role of spatial attention in the context of the Stroop task may have few implications for basic processes in reading because colour processing makes fewer demands on spatial attention than does visual word recognition.
Keywords:Scene perception  Attention  Eye movement control  Individual differences  Processing efficiency  Theory of Visual Attention
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