Publications by authors named "M J Eimer"

Article Synopsis
  • Visual search relies on mental representations called attentional templates, which help focus on defining features of potential targets.
  • The study investigated how many templates can operate at once by comparing single-color and three-color search tasks, measuring brain responses to irrelevant color probes during the search.
  • Results indicated that while it's possible to maintain multiple templates simultaneously, searching with multiple targets incurs performance costs due to interference between these templates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Prior research on task switching has shown that the reconfiguration of stimulus-response mappings across trials is associated with behavioral switch costs. Here, we investigated the effects of switching representations of target-defining features in visual search (attentional templates). Participants searched for one of two color-defined target objects that changed predictably every two trials (Experiment 1) or every four trials (Experiment 2).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

It is often claimed that probabilistic expectations affect visual perception directly, without mediation by selective attention. However, these claims have been disputed, as effects of expectation and attention are notoriously hard to dissociate experimentally. In this study, we used a new approach to separate expectations from attention.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The N2pc and P3 event-related potentials (ERPs), used to index selective attention and access to working memory and conscious awareness, respectively, have been important tools in cognitive sciences. Although it is likely that these two components and the underlying cognitive processes are temporally and functionally linked, such links have not yet been convincingly demonstrated. Adopting a novel methodological approach based on dynamic time warping (DTW), we provide evidence that the N2pc and P3 ERP components are temporally linked.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Efficiently selecting task-relevant objects during visual search depends on foreknowledge of their defining characteristics, which are represented within attentional templates. These templates bias attentional processing toward template-matching sensory signals and are assumed to become anticipatorily activated prior to search display onset. However, a direct neural signal for such preparatory template activation processes has so far remained elusive.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF