2003
DOI: 10.1016/s0364-0213(03)00012-0
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Persistence and accommodation in short-term priming and other perceptual paradigms: temporal segregation through synaptic depression

Abstract: Perceptual input changes constantly in an unpredictable fashion, often changing before our somewhat sluggish perceptual systems have adequately processed this input. This can give rise to source confusion-how do we know whether a given perceptual activation is due to the current input, or a previous input that had yet to be completely processed? We propose that activity-dependent neural accommodation naturally limits this source confusion by suppressing items once they have been identified. We review behaviora… Show more

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Cited by 49 publications
(147 citation statements)
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“…Building on a theory of short-term priming (Huber & O'Reilly, 2003; see also Huber, 2008b), we favor the view that the perceptual system primarily employs mechanisms for detecting differences between stimuli rather than similarities. This theory explained a series of experiments (Huber, Shiffrin, Lyle & Quach, 2002a;Huber, Shiffrin, Lyle, & Ruys, 2001;Huber, Shiffrin, Quach, & Lyle, 2002) that used a two-alternative forced choice (2AFC) paradigm in which a briefly flashed (and masked) target stimulus needed to be identified.…”
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confidence: 85%
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“…Building on a theory of short-term priming (Huber & O'Reilly, 2003; see also Huber, 2008b), we favor the view that the perceptual system primarily employs mechanisms for detecting differences between stimuli rather than similarities. This theory explained a series of experiments (Huber, Shiffrin, Lyle & Quach, 2002a;Huber, Shiffrin, Lyle, & Ruys, 2001;Huber, Shiffrin, Quach, & Lyle, 2002) that used a two-alternative forced choice (2AFC) paradigm in which a briefly flashed (and masked) target stimulus needed to be identified.…”
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confidence: 85%
“…As reviewed in Huber (2008b), this pattern of results is readily explained by proposing that the perceptual system habituates to any stimulus attended (e.g., a prime) and that the amount of habituation becomes greater with longer prime durations (Huber, 2008b;Huber & O'Reilly, 2003). According to this theory, when a prime is very salient, the primed choice word (target or foil) is still in a habituated state when the choice words appear, slowing down perceptual processing for that choice.…”
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confidence: 97%
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