Whether non-spatial previewing can interact with the process of integrating visual features
and thereby affect the formation of illusory conjunctions was studied. A series of ten
experiments were undertaken that employed methods borrowed from the illusory
conjunction and visual previewing paradigms. Participants reported the identities of two
briefly presented target objects. Preview stimuli were presented prior to the to-be-reported
target stimuli. The preview objects and target objects were colour-filled geometric shapes.
The effects of two types of non-spatial previewing were investigated; feature previewing
and conjunction previewing. In feature previewing the preview stimuli were congruent or
incongruent with one of the target stimuli on a single stimulus dimension. The results
suggest that feature previewing does not affect the production of illusory conjunctions. In
conjunction previewing the preview display contains an object composed of two features
that also appear in the subsequent target display. A congruent conjunction preview display
contains an object that is identical to one of the target objects. An incongruent conjunction
preview display contains an object composed of a colour and a shape that appear in
different target objects. The results suggest that incongruent conjunction previews cause
more illusory conjunctions than congruent conjunction previews do. Conjunction previews
appear to priming of the process of visual feature integration. Alternative explanations of
the results were ruled out by subsequent experiments.
The finding of the conjunction preview effect has implications for the current theories of
visual feature integration and illusory conjunctions; e.g., feature integration theory
(Treisman 1990; Treisman & Gelade) and location uncertainty theory (Ashby, Prinzmetal,
Ivry & Maddox, 1996; Prinzmetal &. Keysar, 1989).
Date of Award | 1998 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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THE PRIMING OF VISUAL FEATURE INTEGRATION AND ILLUSORY CONJUNCTIONS
SMITH, G. D. (Author). 1998
Student thesis: PhD