Delay of selective attention during the attentional blink. (9/71)

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Attentional and perceptual factors affecting the attentional blink for faces and objects. (10/71)

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An attentional blink for sequentially presented targets: evidence in favor of resource depletion accounts. (11/71)

Several accounts of the attentional blink (AB) have postulated that this dual-target deficit occurs because of limited-capacity attentional resources being devoted to processing the first target at the expense of the second (resource depletion accounts; e.g., Chun & Potter, 1995). Recent accounts have challenged this model (e.g., Di Lollo, Kawahara, Ghorashi, & Enns, 2005; Olivers, van der Stigchel, & Hulleman, 2007), proposing instead that the AB occurs because of subjects' inability to maintain appropriate levels of attentional controlwhen targets are separated by distractors. Accordingly, the AB is eliminated when three targets from the same attentional set are presented sequentially in a rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) stream. However, under such conditions poorer identification of the first target is typically observed, hinting at a potential trade-off between the first and subsequent target performances. Consistent with this hypothesis, the present study shows that an AB is observed for successive targets from the same attentional set in an RSVP stream when the first target powerfully captures attention. These results suggest that resource depletion contributes significantly to the AB.  (+info)

Theta phase synchrony and conscious target perception: impact of intensive mental training. (12/71)

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Distractor inhibition predicts individual differences in the attentional blink. (13/71)

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Sequential object recognition deficits in normal readers. (14/71)

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Hold it! Memory affects attentional dwell time. (15/71)

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The emotional blink: adult age differences in visual attention to emotional information. (16/71)

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