Attentional weights in vision as products of spatial and nonspatial components

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Abstract

The relationship between visual attentional selection of items in particular spatial locations and selection by nonspatial criteria was investigated in a partial report experiment with report of letters (as many as possible) from brief postmasked exposures of circular arrays of letters and digits. The data were fitted by mathematical models based on Bundesen’s (Psychological Review, 97, 523-547, 1990) theory of visual attention (TVA). Both attentional weights of targets (letters) and attentional weights of distractors (digits) showed strong variations across the eight possible target locations, but for each of the ten participants, the ratio of the weight of a distractor at a given location to the weight of a target at the same location was approximately constant. The results were accommodated by revising the weight equation of TVA such that the attentional weight of an object equals a product of a spatial weight component (weight due to being at a particular location) and a nonspatial weight component (weight due to having particular features other than locations), the two components scaling the effects of each other multiplicatively.

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Nordfang, M., Staugaard, C., & Bundesen, C. (2018). Attentional weights in vision as products of spatial and nonspatial components. Psychonomic Bulletin and Review, 25(3), 1043–1051. https://doi.org/10.3758/s13423-017-1337-1

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