Abstract
A functional model is used to describe the effect of target intensity and target-set similarity on backward visual masking. The model consists of two distinct stages of visual information processing. The first stage is related to sensory transduction and transmission and is assumed to require a finite and measurable amount of time during which performance-remains at chance. The second stage, associated with central processing, is characterized by a negatively accelerated growth function reflecting the accrual of effective information. Results show that the duration of the transmission stage is inversely related to target intensity. Surprisingly, the rate of information accrual is an interactive function of both target intensity and target-set similarity. The pattern of results is consistent with the interpretation that both intensity and similarity mediate their effect through a common mechanism-the accrual of effective information. © 1991 Psychonomic Society, Inc.
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CITATION STYLE
Muise, J. G., LeBlanc, R. S., Lavoie, M. E., & Serge Arsenault, A. (1991). Two-stage model of visual backward masking: Sensory transmission and accrual of effective information as a function of target intensity and similarity. Perception & Psychophysics, 50(3), 197–204. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03206742
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