2004
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2003.2566
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The effects of task and saliency on latencies for colour and motion processing

Abstract: In human visual perception, there is evidence that different visual attributes, such as colour, form and motion, have different neural-processing latencies. Specifically, recent studies have suggested that colour changes are processed faster than motion changes. We propose that the processing latencies should not be considered as fixed quantities for different attributes, but instead depend upon attribute salience and the observer's task.We asked observers to respond to high-and low-salience colour and motion … Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(20 citation statements)
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References 34 publications
(59 reference statements)
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“…It is interesting that the asynchrony vanished when biological motion stimuli were used (Aymoz & Viviani, 2004). In addition, there is research suggesting that the task used (Adams & Mamassian, 2004;Bedell, Chung, Ogmen, & Patel, 2003), attention (Enns & Oriet, 2004;Holcombe & Cavanagh, 2006), and motion direction (Arnold & Clifford, 2002) influence or explain the color-motion asynchrony.…”
Section: Spatial Versus Temporal Errorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is interesting that the asynchrony vanished when biological motion stimuli were used (Aymoz & Viviani, 2004). In addition, there is research suggesting that the task used (Adams & Mamassian, 2004;Bedell, Chung, Ogmen, & Patel, 2003), attention (Enns & Oriet, 2004;Holcombe & Cavanagh, 2006), and motion direction (Arnold & Clifford, 2002) influence or explain the color-motion asynchrony.…”
Section: Spatial Versus Temporal Errorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Without the exogenous ring cue transients, the available transients are weak, especially the motion transients (Adams & Mamassian, 2004;Nishida & Johnston, 2002) which can only be detected at slow rates (Werkhoven, Snippe, & Toet, 1992). While the color transient is stronger and access to the new color happens rapidly, access to the new motion value may be delayed after the reversal until the transient elicits attention.…”
Section: Ring Transients Allow Access To Motion and Color Without Difmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, larger effects of stimulus intensities on RTs compared with TOJs have been reported for spatial frequency (Barr, 1983;Gish, Shulman, Sheehy, & Leibowitz, 1986;Tappe, Niepel, & Neurmann, 1994), retinal position (Jaskowski, 1987), stimulus duration (Jaskowski, 1992), attention (Neumann, Esselmann, & Klotz, 1993), salience (Adams & Mamassian, 2004), and the presence of a preceding stimulus (Kanai, Carlson, Verstraten, & Walsh, 2009).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%