Misdirection, attention and awareness: Inattentional blindness reveals temporal relationship between eye movements and visual awareness

Gustav Kuhn*, John M. Findlay

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

<jats:p> We designed a magic trick that could be used to investigate how misdirection can prevent people from perceiving a visually salient event, thus offering a novel paradigm to examine inattentional blindness. We demonstrate that participants’ verbal reports reflect what they saw rather than inferences about how they thought the trick was done and thus provide a reliable index of conscious perception. Eye movements revealed that for a subset of participants their conscious perception was not related to where they were looking at the time of the event and thus demonstrate how overt and covert attention can be spatially dissociated. However, detection of the event resulted in rapid shifts of eye movements towards the detected event, thus indicating a strong temporal link between overt and covert attention, and that covert attention can be allocated at least 2 or 3 saccade targets ahead of where people are fixating. </jats:p>
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)136-146
Number of pages0
JournalQuarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology
Volume63
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2010

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