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Five experiments investigated the types of changes that disrupt the preview effect--the benefit gained in difficult search tasks from presenting some distractors earlier in time. A shape change with or without an overall luminance change at the location of an old item was found to disrupt the preview effect, whereas an equivalent luminance change alone or an isoluminant color change was not disruptive. Results suggest that (a) relatively low-level visual changes may not be sufficient to abolish the benefit, (b) the benefit most likely occurs through inhibition applied to locations within a location master map, and (c) inhibition need not be applied to surface features of objects.

Original publication

DOI

10.1037//0096-1523.28.2.379

Type

Journal article

Journal

J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform

Publication Date

04/2002

Volume

28

Pages

379 - 395

Keywords

Adolescent, Adult, Attention, Contrast Sensitivity, Female, Fixation, Ocular, Form Perception, Humans, Inhibition, Psychological, Lighting, Male, Psychophysics, Reaction Time, Visual Perception