Bias-free double judgment accuracy during spatial attention cueing: performance enhancement from voluntary and involuntary attention.

Vision Res

Vision Science Graduate Program, University of California, Berkeley, 420 Minor Hall Addition, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA. Electronic address:

Published: December 2014

Recent research has demonstrated that involuntary attention improves target identification accuracy for letters using non-predictive peripheral cues, helping to resolve some of the controversy over performance enhancement from involuntary attention. While various cueing studies have demonstrated that their reported cueing effects were not due to response bias to the cue, very few investigations have quantified the extent of any response bias or developed methods of removing bias from observed results in a double judgment accuracy task. We have devised a method to quantify and remove response bias to cued locations in a double judgment accuracy cueing task, revealing the true, unbiased performance enhancement from involuntary and voluntary attention. In a 7-alternative forced choice cueing task using backward masked stimuli to temporally constrain stimulus processing, non-predictive cueing increased target detection and discrimination at cued locations relative to uncued locations even after cue location bias had been corrected.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.visres.2014.08.004DOI Listing

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