Browsing by Subject "Inhibition of Return"
Now showing items 1-6 of 6
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Exploring the Dissociations between Overt and Covert Mechanisms of Spatial Attention and Inhibition of Return
(2013-09-06)Prompted by oculomotor theories of attention, the present experiments explore the role of saccade activation in the generation of two cueing effects: exogenous capture (Experiment 1) and inhibition of return (IOR; Experiment ... -
Inhibition of Return for Endogenous Colour Cues
(2017-12-18)Inhibition of Return (IOR) is a phenomenon of attention where responses are slower toward a recently attended location, compared with novel locations. Recently, coloured signals have been used endogenously (MacInnes, Kruger ... -
INHIBITORY CONSEQUENCES OF GRASPING MOVEMENTS: IS GRASPING THE SAME AS REACHING?
(2016-08-22)Studies have shown that past actions can impact present and future actions. More specifically, inhibition of return (IOR) is a phenomenon in which participants respond slower to previously attended areas compared to novel ... -
NON-DIRECTIONAL, SYMBOLIC CUES IN A GO BEFORE YOU KNOW TASK
(2020-04-13)Inhibition of Return (IOR) has been observed in reaching movements to a known target location following predictive symbolic cues. Facilitatory like effects, as they appear in traditional cue-target paradigms, have not yet ... -
On the inhibitory consequences of visuospatial orienting: Inhibition of return?
(2016-02-29)Responding is typically slowest toward (an “output” bias) or about (an “input” bias) targets presented at the location indicated by a spatially uninformative visual transient (a “cue”) when the onset asynchrony between the ... -
WHAT’S YOUR NEXT MOVE? MULTIPLE SPATIALLY DEFINED RESPONSE BIASES AFFECT CONSECUTIVE EYE AND ARM MOVEMENTS.
(2018-07-18)Inhibition of return (IOR) is an orienting phenomenon thought to promote efficient visual search by biasing attention, eye movements, or both, toward novel locations. When IOR is present, reaction times (RTs) are slowest ...