en
Scientific article
English

Experience-dependent perceptual grouping and object-based attention

Publication date2002
Abstract

Earlier studies have shown that attention can be directed to objects, defined on the basis of generic grouping principles, highly familiar shapes, or task instructions, rather than to contiguous regions of the visual field. The 4 experiments presented in this article extend these findings, showing that object attention benefits—shorter reaction times to features appearing on a single object—apply to recently viewed novel shapes. One experiment shows that object attention operates even when the visible fragments correspond to objects that violate standard completion heuristics. Other experiments show that experience-dependent object benefits can apply to fragments even without evidence of occlusion. These results attest to the flexible operation of the perceptual system, adapting as a function of experience.

Affiliation Not a UNIGE publication
Citation (ISO format)
ZEMEL, Richard S. et al. Experience-dependent perceptual grouping and object-based attention. In: Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2002, vol. 28, n° 1, p. 202–217. doi: 10.1037/0096-1523.28.1.202
Main files (1)
Article (Published version)
accessLevelRestricted
Identifiers
ISSN of the journal0096-1523
334views
0downloads

Technical informations

Creation10/23/2017 3:26:00 PM
First validation10/23/2017 3:26:00 PM
Update time03/15/2023 8:10:19 AM
Status update03/15/2023 8:10:19 AM
Last indexation01/17/2024 2:44:48 AM
All rights reserved by Archive ouverte UNIGE and the University of GenevaunigeBlack