Frontiers in Psychology (Jun 2015)

Positional priming of visual pop-out search is supported by multiple spatial reference frames

  • Ahu eGokce,
  • Hermann Josef Mueller,
  • Hermann Josef Mueller,
  • Thomas eGeyer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00838
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6

Abstract

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The present study investigates the representations(s) underlying positional priming of visual ‘pop-out’ search (Maljkovic & Nakayama, 1996). Three search items (1 target and 2 distractors) were presented at different locations, in invariant (Experiment 1) or random (Experiment 2) cross-trial sequences. By these manipulations it was possible to disentangle retinotopic, spatiotopic, and object-centered priming representations. Two forms of priming were tested: target location facilitation (i.e., faster reaction times – RTs– when the trial n target is presented at a trial n-1 target relative to n-1 blank location) and distractor location inhibition (i.e., slower RTs for n targets presented at n-1 distractor compared to n-1 blank locations). It was found that target locations were coded in positional short-term memory with reference to both spatiotopic and object-centered representations (Experiment 1 vs. 2). In contrast, distractor locations were maintained in an object-centered reference frame (Experiments 1 and 2). We put forward the idea that the uncertainty induced by the experiment manipulation (predictable versus random cross-trial item displacements) modulates the transition from object- to space-based representations in cross-trial memory for target positions.

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