Location-Specific Orientation Set Is Independent of the Horizontal Benefit with or Without Object Boundaries

Chen and Cave (2019) showed that facilitation in visual comparison tasks that had previously been attributed to object-based attention could more directly be explained as facilitation in comparing two shapes that are configured horizontally rather than vertically. They also cued the orientation of t...

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Main Authors: Zhe Chen, Ailsa Humphries, Kyle R. Cave
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-06-01
Series:Vision
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2411-5150/3/2/30
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spelling doaj-36b3e8ae131c4ab0b03f5475c881c6c92020-11-24T21:27:42ZengMDPI AGVision2411-51502019-06-01323010.3390/vision3020030vision3020030Location-Specific Orientation Set Is Independent of the Horizontal Benefit with or Without Object BoundariesZhe Chen0Ailsa Humphries1Kyle R. Cave2Department of Psychology, University of Canterbury, Christchurch 8140, New ZealandDepartment of Psychology, University of Canterbury, Christchurch 8140, New ZealandDepartment of Psychological and Brain Sciences, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA 01003, USAChen and Cave (2019) showed that facilitation in visual comparison tasks that had previously been attributed to object-based attention could more directly be explained as facilitation in comparing two shapes that are configured horizontally rather than vertically. They also cued the orientation of the upcoming stimulus configuration without cuing its location and found an asymmetry: the orientation cue only enhanced performance for vertical configurations. The current study replicates the horizontal benefit in visual comparison and again demonstrates that it is independent of surrounding object boundaries. In these experiments, the cue is informative about the location of the target configuration as well as its orientation, and it enhances performance for both horizontal and vertical configurations; there is no asymmetry. Either a long or a short cue can enhance performance when it is valid. Thus, Chen and Cave’s cuing asymmetry seems to reflect unusual aspects of an attentional set for orientation that must be established without knowing the upcoming stimulus location. Taken together, these studies show that a location-specific cue enhances comparison independently of the horizontal advantage, while a location-nonspecific cue produces a different type of attentional set that does not enhance comparison in horizontal configurations.https://www.mdpi.com/2411-5150/3/2/30attentional setorientationhorizontal benefitobject-based attentionlocation cuing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zhe Chen
Ailsa Humphries
Kyle R. Cave
spellingShingle Zhe Chen
Ailsa Humphries
Kyle R. Cave
Location-Specific Orientation Set Is Independent of the Horizontal Benefit with or Without Object Boundaries
Vision
attentional set
orientation
horizontal benefit
object-based attention
location cuing
author_facet Zhe Chen
Ailsa Humphries
Kyle R. Cave
author_sort Zhe Chen
title Location-Specific Orientation Set Is Independent of the Horizontal Benefit with or Without Object Boundaries
title_short Location-Specific Orientation Set Is Independent of the Horizontal Benefit with or Without Object Boundaries
title_full Location-Specific Orientation Set Is Independent of the Horizontal Benefit with or Without Object Boundaries
title_fullStr Location-Specific Orientation Set Is Independent of the Horizontal Benefit with or Without Object Boundaries
title_full_unstemmed Location-Specific Orientation Set Is Independent of the Horizontal Benefit with or Without Object Boundaries
title_sort location-specific orientation set is independent of the horizontal benefit with or without object boundaries
publisher MDPI AG
series Vision
issn 2411-5150
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Chen and Cave (2019) showed that facilitation in visual comparison tasks that had previously been attributed to object-based attention could more directly be explained as facilitation in comparing two shapes that are configured horizontally rather than vertically. They also cued the orientation of the upcoming stimulus configuration without cuing its location and found an asymmetry: the orientation cue only enhanced performance for vertical configurations. The current study replicates the horizontal benefit in visual comparison and again demonstrates that it is independent of surrounding object boundaries. In these experiments, the cue is informative about the location of the target configuration as well as its orientation, and it enhances performance for both horizontal and vertical configurations; there is no asymmetry. Either a long or a short cue can enhance performance when it is valid. Thus, Chen and Cave’s cuing asymmetry seems to reflect unusual aspects of an attentional set for orientation that must be established without knowing the upcoming stimulus location. Taken together, these studies show that a location-specific cue enhances comparison independently of the horizontal advantage, while a location-nonspecific cue produces a different type of attentional set that does not enhance comparison in horizontal configurations.
topic attentional set
orientation
horizontal benefit
object-based attention
location cuing
url https://www.mdpi.com/2411-5150/3/2/30
work_keys_str_mv AT zhechen locationspecificorientationsetisindependentofthehorizontalbenefitwithorwithoutobjectboundaries
AT ailsahumphries locationspecificorientationsetisindependentofthehorizontalbenefitwithorwithoutobjectboundaries
AT kylercave locationspecificorientationsetisindependentofthehorizontalbenefitwithorwithoutobjectboundaries
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