Expectancy and visual-spatial attention: Effects on perceptual quality.

1988 Journal of Experimental Psychology Human Perception & Performance 468 citations

Abstract

When we expect important stimuli at a particular spatial location, how does our perceptual sensitivity change over space? Subjects were cued to expect a target stimulus at one location and then required to perform one of the following tasks at that and three other locations: luminance detection, brightness discrimination, orientation discrimination, or form discrimination. The analysis of subjects' performance according to signal detection theory revealed changes in both sensitivity and bias for each of these tasks. Sensitivity was maximally enhanced at the location where a target stimulus was expected and generally decreased with distance from that location. Factors that influenced the gradient of sensitivity were (a) the type of task performed and (b) the spatial distribution of the stimuli. Sensitivity fell off more steeply over distance for orientation and form discrimination than for luminance detection and brightness discrimination. In addition, it fell off more steeply when stimuli were near each other than when they were farther apart.

Keywords

Cued speechLuminanceStimulus (psychology)PerceptionBrightnessPsychologyVisual perceptionOrientation (vector space)AudiologyCommunicationComputer visionCognitive psychologyMathematicsComputer scienceOpticsPhysicsNeuroscience

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Publication Info

Year
1988
Type
article
Volume
14
Issue
2
Pages
188-202
Citations
468
Access
Closed

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Cathryn Downing (1988). Expectancy and visual-spatial attention: Effects on perceptual quality.. Journal of Experimental Psychology Human Perception & Performance , 14 (2) , 188-202. https://doi.org/10.1037//0096-1523.14.2.188

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DOI
10.1037//0096-1523.14.2.188