Orientation probability and spatial exogenous cuing improve perceptual precision and response speed by different mechanisms

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Abstract

We are faster and more accurate at detecting frequently occurring objects than infrequent ones, just as we are faster and more accurate at detecting objects that have been spatially cued. Does this behavioral similarity reflect similar processes? To evaluate this question we manipulated orientation probability and exogenous spatial cuing within a single perceptual estimation task. Both increased target probability and spatial cuing led to shorter response initiation times and more precise perceptual reports, but these effects were additive. Further, target probability changed the shape of the distribution of errors while spatial cuing did not. Different routes and independent mechanisms could lead to changes in behavioral measures that look similar to each other and to 'attentional' effects.

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APA

Jabar, S. B., & Anderson, B. (2017). Orientation probability and spatial exogenous cuing improve perceptual precision and response speed by different mechanisms. Frontiers in Psychology, 8(FEB). https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00183

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