Parieto-occipital areas involved in efficient filtering in search: a time course analysis of visual marking using behavioural and functional imaging procedures.

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Standard

Parieto-occipital areas involved in efficient filtering in search: a time course analysis of visual marking using behavioural and functional imaging procedures. / Humphreys, Glyn W; Kyllingsbæk, Søren; Watson, Derrick G.; Olivers, Chris N. L.; Law, Ian; Paulson, Olaf B.

I: Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology. Section A: Human Experimental Psychology, Bind 57, Nr. 4, 2004, s. 610-635.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Humphreys, GW, Kyllingsbæk, S, Watson, DG, Olivers, CNL, Law, I & Paulson, OB 2004, 'Parieto-occipital areas involved in efficient filtering in search: a time course analysis of visual marking using behavioural and functional imaging procedures.', Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology. Section A: Human Experimental Psychology, bind 57, nr. 4, s. 610-635. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov//entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&dopt=Citation&list_uids=15204126>

APA

Humphreys, G. W., Kyllingsbæk, S., Watson, D. G., Olivers, C. N. L., Law, I., & Paulson, O. B. (2004). Parieto-occipital areas involved in efficient filtering in search: a time course analysis of visual marking using behavioural and functional imaging procedures. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology. Section A: Human Experimental Psychology, 57(4), 610-635. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov//entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&dopt=Citation&list_uids=15204126

Vancouver

Humphreys GW, Kyllingsbæk S, Watson DG, Olivers CNL, Law I, Paulson OB. Parieto-occipital areas involved in efficient filtering in search: a time course analysis of visual marking using behavioural and functional imaging procedures. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology. Section A: Human Experimental Psychology. 2004;57(4):610-635.

Author

Humphreys, Glyn W ; Kyllingsbæk, Søren ; Watson, Derrick G. ; Olivers, Chris N. L. ; Law, Ian ; Paulson, Olaf B. / Parieto-occipital areas involved in efficient filtering in search: a time course analysis of visual marking using behavioural and functional imaging procedures. I: Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology. Section A: Human Experimental Psychology. 2004 ; Bind 57, Nr. 4. s. 610-635.

Bibtex

@article{e76ba7bc5d3f4d9ab142845e09f88232,
title = "Parieto-occipital areas involved in efficient filtering in search: a time course analysis of visual marking using behavioural and functional imaging procedures.",
abstract = "Search for a colour-form conjunction target can be facilitated by presenting one set of distractors prior to the second set of distractors and the target: the preview benefit (Watson & Humphreys, 1997). The early presentation of one set of distractors enables them to be efficiently filtered from search. We report two studies investigating the time course of the preview benefit. In Experiment 1 we use a standard reaction time analysis to show that the benefit has a relatively slow time course; old items need to precede the new set by 600 ms or more in order to be fully filtered from search. Furthermore, the reductions in reaction time across time in the preview condition varied nonlinearly with the display size, suggesting that old items were discounted from search in parallel. In Experiment 2 we examined the neural locus of this filtering effect over time, using positron emission tomography (PET). We show that regions of parieto-occipital cortex are selectively activated in a preview search condition relative to a detection baseline. These regions also increase in activation as the preview interval increases (and search then becomes easier), consistent with them modulating the parallel filtering of distractors from targets in spatial search. Interestingly, the same areas as those activated in preview search were also active in conjunction search relative to its own detection baseline. Thus these regions either modulate parallel filtering in conjunction search too, or they modulate different behavioural functions according to task constraints",
author = "Humphreys, {Glyn W} and S{\o}ren Kyllingsb{\ae}k and Watson, {Derrick G.} and Olivers, {Chris N. L.} and Ian Law and Paulson, {Olaf B.}",
year = "2004",
language = "English",
volume = "57",
pages = "610--635",
journal = "Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology",
issn = "1747-0218",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Parieto-occipital areas involved in efficient filtering in search: a time course analysis of visual marking using behavioural and functional imaging procedures.

AU - Humphreys, Glyn W

AU - Kyllingsbæk, Søren

AU - Watson, Derrick G.

AU - Olivers, Chris N. L.

AU - Law, Ian

AU - Paulson, Olaf B.

PY - 2004

Y1 - 2004

N2 - Search for a colour-form conjunction target can be facilitated by presenting one set of distractors prior to the second set of distractors and the target: the preview benefit (Watson & Humphreys, 1997). The early presentation of one set of distractors enables them to be efficiently filtered from search. We report two studies investigating the time course of the preview benefit. In Experiment 1 we use a standard reaction time analysis to show that the benefit has a relatively slow time course; old items need to precede the new set by 600 ms or more in order to be fully filtered from search. Furthermore, the reductions in reaction time across time in the preview condition varied nonlinearly with the display size, suggesting that old items were discounted from search in parallel. In Experiment 2 we examined the neural locus of this filtering effect over time, using positron emission tomography (PET). We show that regions of parieto-occipital cortex are selectively activated in a preview search condition relative to a detection baseline. These regions also increase in activation as the preview interval increases (and search then becomes easier), consistent with them modulating the parallel filtering of distractors from targets in spatial search. Interestingly, the same areas as those activated in preview search were also active in conjunction search relative to its own detection baseline. Thus these regions either modulate parallel filtering in conjunction search too, or they modulate different behavioural functions according to task constraints

AB - Search for a colour-form conjunction target can be facilitated by presenting one set of distractors prior to the second set of distractors and the target: the preview benefit (Watson & Humphreys, 1997). The early presentation of one set of distractors enables them to be efficiently filtered from search. We report two studies investigating the time course of the preview benefit. In Experiment 1 we use a standard reaction time analysis to show that the benefit has a relatively slow time course; old items need to precede the new set by 600 ms or more in order to be fully filtered from search. Furthermore, the reductions in reaction time across time in the preview condition varied nonlinearly with the display size, suggesting that old items were discounted from search in parallel. In Experiment 2 we examined the neural locus of this filtering effect over time, using positron emission tomography (PET). We show that regions of parieto-occipital cortex are selectively activated in a preview search condition relative to a detection baseline. These regions also increase in activation as the preview interval increases (and search then becomes easier), consistent with them modulating the parallel filtering of distractors from targets in spatial search. Interestingly, the same areas as those activated in preview search were also active in conjunction search relative to its own detection baseline. Thus these regions either modulate parallel filtering in conjunction search too, or they modulate different behavioural functions according to task constraints

M3 - Journal article

VL - 57

SP - 610

EP - 635

JO - Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology

JF - Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology

SN - 1747-0218

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 34059297