Article

Central inhibition ability modulates attention-induced motion blindness

Details

Citation

Milders MV, Hay JL, Sahraie A & Niedeggen M (2004) Central inhibition ability modulates attention-induced motion blindness. Cognition, 94 (2), pp. B23-B33. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2004.06.003

Abstract
Impaired motion perception can be induced in normal observers in a rapid serial visual presentation task. Essential for this effect is the presence of motion distractors prior to the motion target, and we proposed that this attention-induced motion blindness results from high-level inhibition produced by the distractors. To investigate this, we compared the extent of the attention-induced motion blindness effect with performance on central inhibition tasks: Stroop colour naming and negative priming. A negative correlation between Stroop interference and motion performance reflected that low Stroop scores, indicative of strong inhibition ability, was associated with more severe impairments in motion perception. This association could not be explained by individual differences in fluid intelligence, task switching or response speed. Negative priming was not specifically associated with attention-induced motion blindness. The results confirm that attention can modulate motion perception and suggest that the processes involved may be shared with high-level cognitive abilities.

Keywords
Motion perception; Attention; Inhibition; Individual differences

Journal
Cognition: Volume 94, Issue 2

StatusPublished
FundersVolkswagen Stiftung
Publication date31/12/2004
Publication date online11/09/2004
Date accepted by journal09/06/2004
PublisherElsevier
ISSN0010-0277

People (1)

Professor Julia Allan

Professor Julia Allan

Professor in Psychology, Psychology