Article
Details
Citation
Hesselmann G, Allan JL, Sahraie A, Milders M & Niedeggen M (2009) Inhibition related impairments of coherent motion perception in the attention-induced motion blindness paradigm. Spatial Vision, 22 (6), pp. 493-509. https://doi.org/10.1163/156856809789822961
Abstract
A striking effect of selective attention on perception of first- and second-order motion has
been termed ‘attention-induced motion blindness’ or AMB (Sahraie et al., 2001). The AMB paradigm
is based on a rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) task and causes a severe transient impairment of
the detection of coherent motion in a random dot kinematogram (RDK). The effect crucially depends on irrelevant motion intervals (distractors) prior to the motion target. To account for this phenomenon, both psychophysical and electrophysiological studies point to the existence of a post-perceptual gate operated by attentional mechanisms that limits access to the encoded motion signals by higher cortical areas. Here, we report in a first experiment that the presentation of motion distractors reduces motion
sensitivity (operationalised as motion coherence threshold) which is in line with the assumption of a temporal carry-over effect of distractor inhibition. In a second experiment, we show that the rate
of recovery of AMB is independent of target salience. The results of the third experiment provide evidence against the assumption that AMB is due to a shift or expansion of the ‘attentional spotlight’.
Keywords
Inhibition; Coherent motion; Attention; RSVP
Journal
Spatial Vision: Volume 22, Issue 6
Status | Published |
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Funders | Volkswagen Stiftung |
Publication date | 06/07/2009 |
Publication date online | 01/01/2009 |
ISSN | 0169-1015 |
eISSN | 1568-5683 |
People (1)
Professor in Psychology, Psychology