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Your search keyword '"Thornton, Ian"' showing total 28 results

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28 results on '"Thornton, Ian"'

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1. The effects of visual and auditory synchrony on human foraging.

2. Foraging tempo: Human run patterns in multiple-target search are constrained by the rate of successive responses.

3. Searching for illusory motion.

4. Dynamics of visual attention revealed in foraging tasks.

5. Time limits during visual foraging reveal flexible working memory templates.

6. Do People "Pop Out"?

7. Common attentional constraints in visual foraging.

8. Interactive multiple object tracking (iMOT).

9. Modulation of working-memory maintenance by directed attention.

10. A search advantage for faces learned in motion.

11. An advantage for detecting dynamic targets in natural scenes.

12. The multi-item localization (MILO) task: measuring the spatiotemporal context of vision for action.

13. Explicit mechanisms do not account for implicit localization and identification of change: An empirical reply to Mitroff et al. (2002).

14. Representation of change: separate electrophysiological markers of attention, awareness, and implicit processing.

15. Active versus passive processing of biological motion.

16. The Predation Game: Does Dividing Attention Affect Patterns of Human Foraging?

18. A Search Advantage for Horizontal Targets in Dynamic Displays.

19. Are Foraging Patterns in Humans Related to Working Memory and Inhibitory Control?

20. Searching Through Alternating Sequences: Working Memory and Inhibitory Tagging Mechanisms Revealed Using the MILO Task.

21. MILO Mobile: An iPad App to Measure Search Performance in Multi-Target Sequences.

22. A serious game to explore human foraging in a 3D environment.

23. The influence of selection modality, display dynamics and error feedback on patterns of human foraging.

24. Administering Cognitive Tests Through Touch Screen Tablet Devices: Potential Issues.

25. An implicit measure of undetected change.

26. Inhibitory control deficits in vascular cognitive impairment revealed using the MILO task.

27. Change Detection Without Awareness: Do Explicit Reports Underestimate the Representation of Change in the Visual System?

28. Sensitivity to changes with and without awareness: An empirical investigation

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