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Priming of pop-out: I. Role of features

  • Published: November 1994
  • Volume 22, pages 657–672, (1994)
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Memory & Cognition Aims and scope Submit manuscript
Priming of pop-out: I. Role of features
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  • Vera Maljkovic1 nAff2 &
  • Ken Nakayama1 
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  • 888 Citations

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Abstract

We examined a visual search task, in which observers responded to the high-acuity aspect of a popout target (shape of an odd-colored diamond or vernier offset of an odd spatial-frequency patch). Repetition of the attention-driving feature (color or spatial frequency) in this task primes the popout; repetition of the high-acuity aspect (shape, vernier offset) does not. Priming of pop-out is due to a decaying memory trace of the attention-focusing feature laid down with each trial. The trace exerts a diminishing effect over the following five to eight trials (≈30 sec), and its influence over this time is cumulative. Observers cannot willfully overcome the priming, which suggests that it is passive and autonomous. Both target facilitation and distractor inhibition are evident; the former has a greater effect. The phenomenon shows complete binocular transfer.

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Author information

Author notes
  1. Vera Maljkovic

    Present address: Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts, USA

Authors and Affiliations

  1. Department of Psychology, Harvard University, 33 Kirkland Street, 02138, Cambridge, MA

    Vera Maljkovic & Ken Nakayama

Authors
  1. Vera Maljkovic
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  2. Ken Nakayama
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Corresponding author

Correspondence to Ken Nakayama.

Additional information

This work was supported by AFOSR Grant F49620-92-J-0016 to K.N.

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Cite this article

Maljkovic, V., Nakayama, K. Priming of pop-out: I. Role of features. Memory & Cognition 22, 657–672 (1994). https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03209251

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  • Received: 15 April 1993

  • Accepted: 29 November 1993

  • Issue Date: November 1994

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03209251

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Keywords

  • Spatial Frequency
  • Journal ofExperimental Psychology
  • Implicit Memory
  • Current Trial
  • Visual Search Task
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