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                             33 results found
no title author magazine year volume issue page(s) type
1 All eyes on relevance: strategic allocation of attention as a result of feature-based task demands in multiple object tracking Brockhoff, Alisa
2016
78 7 p. 2090-2109
article
2 Appetitive and aversive outcome associations modulate exogenous cueing Bucker, Berno
2016
78 7 p. 2253-2265
article
3 Attending to multiple objects relies on both feature- and dimension-based control mechanisms: Evidence from human electrophysiology Töllner, Thomas
2016
78 7 p. 2079-2089
article
4 Automaticity of phasic alertness: Evidence for a three-component model of visual cueing Lin, Zhicheng
2016
78 7 p. 1948-1967
article
5 Central attention is serial, but midlevel and peripheral attention are parallel—A hypothesis Tamber-Rosenau, Benjamin J.
2016
78 7 p. 1874-1888
article
6 Choosing attentional control settings in a dynamically changing environment Irons, Jessica L.
2016
78 7 p. 2031-2048
article
7 Decomposing experience-driven attention: Opposite attentional effects of previously predictive cues Lin, Zhicheng
2016
78 7 p. 2185-2198
article
8 Detection of object onsets and offsets: Does the primacy of onset persist even with bias for detecting offset? Donaldson, Maria J.
2016
78 7 p. 1901-1915
article
9 Distractors associated with reward break through the focus of attention Munneke, Jaap
2016
78 7 p. 2213-2225
article
10 Do different attention capture paradigms measure different types of capture? Roque, Nelson A.
2016
78 7 p. 2014-2030
article
11 Does visual attention drive the dynamics of bistable perception? Dieter, Kevin C.
2016
78 7 p. 1861-1873
article
12 Do sudden onsets need to be perceived as new objects to capture attention? The interplay between sensory transients and display configuration Owens, Caleb
2016
78 7 p. 1916-1925
article
13 Executive control of stimulus-driven and goal-directed attention in visual working memory Hu, Yanmei
2016
78 7 p. 2164-2175
article
14 Expect the unexpected: a paradoxical effect of cue validity on the orienting of attention Jollie, Ashley
2016
78 7 p. 2124-2134
article
15 Funny money: the attentional role of monetary feedback detached from expected value Roper, Zachary J. J.
2016
78 7 p. 2199-2212
article
16 High spatial validity is not sufficient to elicit voluntary shifts of attention Pauszek, Joseph R.
2016
78 7 p. 2110-2123
article
17 Identifying visual targets amongst interfering distractors: Sorting out the roles of perceptual load, dilution, and attentional zoom Cave, Kyle R.
2016
78 7 p. 1822-1838
article
18 In search of the focus of attention in working memory: 13 years of the retro-cue effect Souza, Alessandra S.
2016
78 7 p. 1839-1860
article
19 Intertrial priming due to distractor repetition is eliminated in homogeneous contexts Feldmann-Wüstefeld, Tobias
2016
78 7 p. 1935-1947
article
20 Introduction to the special issue Anderson, Brian A.
2016
78 7 p. 1819-1821
article
21 Intrusive effects of semantic information on visual selective attention Malcolm, George L.
2016
78 7 p. 2066-2078
article
22 Irrelevant learned reward associations disrupt voluntary spatial attention MacLean, Mary H.
2016
78 7 p. 2241-2252
article
23 Perceptual salience captures the eyes on a surprise trial Horstmann, Gernot
2016
78 7 p. 1889-1900
article
24 Saccade latency indexes exogenous and endogenous object-based attention Şentürk, Gözde
2016
78 7 p. 1998-2013
article
25 Target–object integration, attention distribution, and object orientation interactively modulate object-based selection Al-Janabi, Shahd
2016
78 7 p. 1968-1984
article
26 Target templates specify visual, not semantic, features to guide search: A marked asymmetry between seeking and ignoring Daffron, Jennifer L.
2016
78 7 p. 2049-2065
article
27 The role of unique color changes and singletons in attention capture Mühlenen, Adrian von
2016
78 7 p. 1926-1934
article
28 Threat captures attention, but not automatically: Top-down goals modulate attentional orienting to threat distractors Vromen, Joyce M. G.
2016
78 7 p. 2266-2279
article
29 Tracking the will to attend: Cortical activity indexes self-generated, voluntary shifts of attention Gmeindl, Leon
2016
78 7 p. 2176-2184
article
30 Value-modulated oculomotor capture by task-irrelevant stimuli is a consequence of early competition on the saccade map Pearson, Daniel
2016
78 7 p. 2226-2240
article
31 Visual field meridians modulate the reallocation of object-based attention Barnas, Adam J.
2016
78 7 p. 1985-1997
article
32 When is it time to move to the next map? Optimal foraging in guided visual search Ehinger, Krista A.
2016
78 7 p. 2135-2151
article
33 Which way is which? Examining symbolic control of attention with compound arrow cues Mills, Mark
2016
78 7 p. 2152-2163
article
                             33 results found
 
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