Previous studies have reported seemingly conflicting results regarding how the amount of stimulus similarity between two simultaneously presented target stimuli impacts perceptual performance. There are many reports of 'repetition blindness', where individuals do worse when shown two similar stimuli relative to two different stimuli. On the other hand, there are reports of 'similarity grouping', where participants perform better when identifying two similar objects relative to two different objects. This manuscript posits that repetition blindness and similarity grouping coexist and can be elicited in the same subjects in a single task. This not only explains the previous opposite effects of stimulus similarity on task performance, but also provides a unique opportunity to directly compare these opposite effects of stimulus similarity with respect to susceptibility to a modulating factor. Since previous studies have provided inconclusive results on whether attentional relevance can modulate the effect of stimulus similarity on task performance, the current manuscript aims to compare repetition blindness and similarity grouping with respect to their susceptibility to attentional relevance. The results of the first experiment confirmed that both repetition blindness and similarity grouping can be elicited in the same experiment, suggesting that repetition blindness and similarity grouping coexist. The results of the second experiment suggest that both repetition blindness and similarity grouping can be modulated by attentional relevance. These results support the explanation of repetition blindness as a token individuation failure. Furthermore, these results suggest that supposedly pre-attentional grouping mechanisms might not operate as independently from top-down attentional modulations as traditionally thought.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2010.00020 | DOI Listing |
Mem Cognit
January 2025
Department of Neurology, University of California Davis, Sacramento, CA, 95816, USA.
In cognitive psychology, research on attention is shifting from focusing primarily on how people orient toward stimuli in the environment toward instead examining how people orient internally toward memory representations. With this new shift the question arises: What factors in the environment send attention inward? A recent proposal is that one factor is cue familiarity-detection (Cleary, Irving & Mills, Cognitive Science, 47, e13274, 2023). Within this theoretical framework, we reinterpret a decades-old empirical pattern-a primacy effect in memory for repetitions-in a novel way.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSensors (Basel)
July 2024
Department of Aerospace and Technology, Space Engineering University, Beijing 101416, China.
The response of a DPbS3200 infrared detector irradiated by a nanosecond pulsed laser and CW laser has been investigated to study laser-induced interference. A laser interference experiment system was constructed to measure the time-varying response signal. A nanosecond pulsed laser and a CW laser of 10 Hz were used, with a 1064 nm wavelength and a millimeter-scale irradiation spot diameter.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIEEE Trans Biomed Eng
July 2024
Current imaging techniques in echography rely on the pulse-echo (PE) paradigm which provides a straight-forward access to the in-depth structure of tissues. They inherently face two major challenges: the limitation of the pulse repetition frequency, directly linked to the imaging framerate, and, due to the emission scheme, their blindness to the phenomena that happen in the medium during the majority of the acquisition time. To overcome these limitations, we propose a new paradigm for ultrasound imaging, denoted by continuous emission ultrasound imaging (CEUI) [1], for a single input single output (SISO) device.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenetics
June 2024
Chinese Institutes for Medical Research, Capital Medical University, Beijing 100069, China.
Face recognition is important for both visual and social cognition. While prosopagnosia or face blindness has been known for seven decades and face-specific neurons for half a century, the molecular genetic mechanism is not clear. Here we report results after 17 years of research with classic genetics and modern genomics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPerception
May 2024
Wheaton College, USA.
A form of repetition blindness in visually unimpaired individuals was found for objects presented during saccades. Observers were asked to draw their percepts after making saccades across an LED strip that "painted" an image on their retinas by presenting sequential columns of a bitmap at a speed to match a 30-degree saccade. During experimental trials, repetitions of a single letter (either "A," "X," "H," or "V") were presented across saccades.
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