Involuntary attention and brightness contrast William PrinzmetalVirginia LongJames Leonhardt OriginalPaper Pages: 1139 - 1150
Transient attention does increase perceived contrast of suprathreshold stimuli: A reply to Prinzmetal, Long, and Leonhardt (2008) Marisa CarrascoStuart FullerSam Ling OriginalPaper Pages: 1151 - 1164
Set recognition as a window to perceptual and cognitive processes Michal JacobShaul Hochstein OriginalPaper Pages: 1165 - 1184
The distribution of attention within objects in multiple-object scenes: Prioritization by spatial probabilities and a center bias Cary S. Feria OriginalPaper Pages: 1185 - 1196
Haptic orientation perception benefits from visual experience: Evidence from early-blind, late-blind, and sighted people Albert PostmaSander ZuidhoekAstrid M. L. Kappers OriginalPaper Pages: 1197 - 1206
Auditory and visual attention-based apparent motion share functional parallels Wendy E. HuddlestonJames W. LewisEdgar A. DeYoe OriginalPaper Pages: 1207 - 1216
On the dynamic information underlying visual anticipation skill Raoul HuysNicholas J. SmeetonA. Mark Wiliams OriginalPaper Pages: 1217 - 1234
On building models of spoken-word recognition: When there is as much to learn from natural “oddities” as artificial normality Sven L. MattysJune M. Liss OriginalPaper Pages: 1235 - 1242
Psychophysical influences on the validity of anomaloscopic assessments of color vision Jennifer A. Stillman OriginalPaper Pages: 1243 - 1247
Evidence for criterion shifts in visual perceptual learning: Data and implications Michael J. WengerAngelina M. CopelandRobin D. Thomas OriginalPaper Pages: 1248 - 1273
Inverted-U effects generalize to the judgment of subjective properties of faces Alain MignaultA. A. J. MarleyAvi Chaudhuri OriginalPaper Pages: 1274 - 1288
Orientation illusions vary in size and direction as a function of task-dependent attention Roberta DainiPeter Wenderoth OriginalPaper Pages: 1289 - 1297
Take a look at the bright side: Effects of contrast polarity on gaze direction judgments Bettina OlkLawrence A. SymonsAlan Kingstone OriginalPaper Pages: 1298 - 1304
Temporal preparation facilitates perceptual identification of letters Bettina Rolke OriginalPaper Pages: 1305 - 1313
Detection of collision events on curved trajectories: Optical information from invariant rate-of-bearing change Rui NiGeorge J. Andersen OriginalPaper Pages: 1314 - 1324
Better than average? When can we say that subsampling of items is better than statistical summary representations? Dan Ariely OriginalPaper Pages: 1325 - 1326
Statistical processing: Not so implausible after all Sang Chul ChongSung Jun JooAnne Treisman OriginalPaper Pages: 1327 - 1334
Average size perception and the allure of a new mechanism Daniel J. SimonsKristoffer Myczek OriginalPaper Pages: 1335 - 1336
Looking at scenes while searching for numbers: Dividing attention multiplies space Helene IntraubKaren K. DanielsJeremy M. Wolfe OriginalPaper Pages: 1337 - 1349
Repetition priming and the haptic recognition of familiar and unfamiliar objects Matt CraddockRebecca Lawson OriginalPaper Pages: 1350 - 1365
The role of color in visual search in real-world scenes: Evidence from contextual cuing Krista A. EhingerJames R. Brockmole OriginalPaper Pages: 1366 - 1378
Influence of hand position on the near effect in 3-D attention Petra M. J. PolluxPatrick A. Bourke OriginalPaper Pages: 1383 - 1392
Effects of prime—target spatial separation and attentional deployment on masked repetition priming Yousri MarzoukiMartijn MeeterJonathan Grainger OriginalPaper Pages: 1393 - 1400