Abstract
Priming of visual search for Gabor patch stimuli, varying in color and local drift direction, was investigated. The task relevance of each feature varied between the different experimental conditions compared. When the target defining dimension was color, a large effect of color repetition was seen as well as a smaller effect of the repetition of motion direction. The opposite priming pattern was seen when motion direction defined the target—the effect of motion direction repetition was this time larger than for color repetition. Finally, when neither was task relevant, and the target defining dimension was the spatial frequency of the Gabor patch, priming was seen for repetition of both color and motion direction, but the effects were smaller than in the previous two conditions. These results show that features do not necessarily have to be task relevant for priming to occur. There is little interaction between priming following repetition of color and motion, these two features show independent and additive priming effects, most likely reflecting that the two features are processed at separate processing sites in the nervous system, consistent with previous findings from neuropsychology & neurophysiology. The implications of the findings for theoretical accounts of priming in visual search are discussed.
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Notes
\( {\text{eta}} = \sqrt {F(df_{effect} )/(F(df_{effect} ) + (df_{error} )} ). \)
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Kristjánsson, Á. Independent and additive repetition priming of motion direction and color in visual search. Psychological Research 73, 158–166 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00426-008-0205-z
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00426-008-0205-z