1. Attentional Filtering of Transients Allows for a Recovery from Change Blindness.
- Author
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Becker, Mark W and Vera, Sara
- Subjects
- *
NEUROPLASTICITY - Abstract
Previous reports suggest that introducing distracting visual transients during a change-detection task can result in change blindness. In four experiments, we found that presenting the distracting transients repeatedly prior to the change produces a recovery from change blindness. This recovery from change blindness is not due solely to low-level neural adaptation of transient detectors, but instead seems to be based on attentional filtering of the distracting transient signals. This attentional filtering can be object-based rather than location-based. In addition, we found that the ability to achieve this attentional filtering depends critically on presenting the to-be-ignored transient signals prior to the time of the change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
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