Title
Exposure Time Mediates Perceptual Global Advantage with a Divided-Attention Paradigm
Abstract
The effects of exposure duration of stimulus on perceptual global precedence were examined using a divided-attention paradigm and a normal/mirror judgment task. In the experiment, stimuli were presented at two exposure durations (unlimited and 80 ms). Subjects had to decide whether or not a normal letter appeared at either level of a compound stimulus. The results showed when the exposure time was limited as 80 ms, the subjects responded faster to global level of compound stimulus than to local level; when the exposure time was unlimited, the subjects' response to global level of compound stimulus and to local level was of no difference. Our findings were discussed in terms of the mechanism of perceptual global advantage.
Year
DOI
Venue
2009
10.1109/ICNC.2009.595
ICNC (5)
Keywords
Field
DocType
mirror judgment task,stimulus exposure duration,normal letter,time 80 ms,global level,divided-attention paradigm,global advantage,exposure time mediates perceptual,vision,judgment task,perceptual global advantage,exposure duration,perceptual global precedence,local level,visual perception,exposure time,compound stimulus,interference,psychology,data mining,visualization,cognition
Visualization,Computer science,Cognitive psychology,Artificial intelligence,Stimulus (physiology),Divided attention,Cognition,Perception,Neutral stimulus,Visual perception,Machine learning,Global precedence
Conference
Volume
ISBN
Citations 
5
978-0-7695-3736-8
1
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.43
1
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Xiang Qiu141.85
Xiaolan Fu278660.72
Chenming Luo310.43