Literature DB >> 12219806

Objects and events in the attentional blink.

Dianne M Sheppard1, John Duncan, Kinnron L Shapiro, Anne P Hillstrom.   

Abstract

When two visual targets, T1 and T2, are presented in rapid succession, detection or identification of T2 is almost universally degraded by the requirement to attend to T1 (the attentional blink, or AB). One interesting exception occurs when T1 is a brief gap in a continuous letter stream and the task is to discriminate its duration. One hypothesized explanation for this exception is that an AB is triggered only by attention to a patterned object. The results reported here eliminate this hypothesis. Duration judgments produced no AB whether the judged duration concerned a short gap in the letter stream (Experiment 1) or a letter presentedfor slightly longer than others (Experiment 2). When identification of an identical longer letter T1 was required (Experiment 3), rather than a duration judgment, the AB was reestablished Direct perceptual judgments of letter streams with gaps embedded showed that whereas brief gaps result in the percept of a single, briefly hesitating stream, longer gaps result in the percept of two separate streams with a separating pause. Correspondingly, an AB was produced in Experiment 4, when participants were required to judge the duration of longer T1 gaps. We propose that, like spatially separated objects, temporal events are parsed into discrete, hierarchically organized events. An AB is triggered only when a new attended event is defined, either when a long pause creates a new perceived stream (Experiment 4) or when attention shifts from the stream to the letter level (Experiment 3).

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 12219806     DOI: 10.1111/1467-9280.00473

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Sci        ISSN: 0956-7976


  6 in total

1.  Short-term memory and the attentional blink: capacity versus content.

Authors:  Elkan G Akyürek; Bernhard Hommel
Journal:  Mem Cognit       Date:  2005-06

Review 2.  How the brain blinks: towards a neurocognitive model of the attentional blink.

Authors:  Bernhard Hommel; Klaus Kessler; Frank Schmitz; Joachim Gross; Elkan Akyürek; Kimron Shapiro; Alfons Schnitzler
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2005-10-20

3.  Task-irrelevant visual motion and flicker attenuate the attentional blink.

Authors:  Isabel Arend; Stephen Johnston; Kimron Shapiro
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2006-08

Review 4.  The 'when' parietal pathway explored by lesion studies.

Authors:  Lorella Battelli; Vincent Walsh; Alvaro Pascual-Leone; Patrick Cavanagh
Journal:  Curr Opin Neurobiol       Date:  2008-08-29       Impact factor: 6.627

5.  Emotion-induced blindness reflects competition at early and late processing stages: an ERP study.

Authors:  Briana L Kennedy; Jennifer Rawding; Steven B Most; James E Hoffman
Journal:  Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci       Date:  2014-12       Impact factor: 3.526

6.  Dynamics of the central bottleneck: dual-task and task uncertainty.

Authors:  Mariano Sigman; Stanislas Dehaene
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2006-07       Impact factor: 8.029

  6 in total

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