Abstract
We investigated whether plaids activate preattentive mechanisms that are distinct from those activated by their component gratings. Observers searched for a target plaid, the sum of two perpendicular components in a circular window (radius = 0.65°). The target was present on half the trials. On all trials, half of the distractors had the same frequency and orientation as one component of the plaid, and the rest were the same as the other component. The target and the distractors were arrayed evenly on a circle (radius = 2.36°) around fixation. Target and distractor contrasts were randomly perturbed up to ±30%. The following results held for each of the 6 participants tested. (1) WhenF1 = 2 c/deg and F2 = 5.25 c/deg, response times (RTs) increased significantly when set size (number of distractors plus target, if present) was increased from four to eight. (2) When the spatial frequencies of both plaid components were the same (i.e., both 2 c/deg or both 5.25 c/deg), RTs increased very slightly, if at all, when set size was increased from four to eight. These results suggest the existence of a preattentive, plaid-sensitive mechanism with band-limited input that does not respond to individual grating components. © 2009 The Psychonomic Society, Inc.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Nam, J. H. O., Solomon, J. A., Morgan, M. J., Wright, C. E., & Chubb, C. (2009). Coherent plaids are preattentively more than the sum of their parts. Attention, Perception, and Psychophysics, 71(7), 1469–1477. https://doi.org/10.3758/APP.71.7.1469
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.