Attention and the speed of information processing: posterior entry for unattended stimuli instead of prior entry for attended stimuli.

Why are nearly simultaneous stimuli frequently perceived in reversed order? The origin of errors in temporal judgments is a question older than experimental psychology itself. One of the earliest suspects is attention. According to the concept of prior entry, attention accelerates attended stimuli;...

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Main Authors: Katharina Weiß, Frederic Hilkenmeier, Ingrid Scharlau
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3559738?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-ccf48f053a49447c980fde9537c2666f2020-11-25T02:20:10ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0181e5425710.1371/journal.pone.0054257Attention and the speed of information processing: posterior entry for unattended stimuli instead of prior entry for attended stimuli.Katharina WeißFrederic HilkenmeierIngrid ScharlauWhy are nearly simultaneous stimuli frequently perceived in reversed order? The origin of errors in temporal judgments is a question older than experimental psychology itself. One of the earliest suspects is attention. According to the concept of prior entry, attention accelerates attended stimuli; thus they have "prior entry" to perceptive processing stages, including consciousness. Although latency advantages for attended stimuli have been revealed in psychophysical studies many times, these measures (e.g. temporal order judgments, simultaneity judgments) cannot test the prior-entry hypothesis completely. Since they assess latency differences between an attended and an unattended stimulus, they cannot distinguish between faster processing of attended stimuli and slower processing of unattended stimuli. Therefore, we present a novel paradigm providing separate estimates for processing advantages respectively disadvantages of attended and unattended stimuli. We found that deceleration of unattended stimuli contributes more strongly to the prior-entry illusion than acceleration of attended stimuli. Thus, in the temporal domain, attention fulfills its selective function primarily by deceleration of unattended stimuli. That means it is actually posterior entry, not prior entry which accounts for the largest part of the effect.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3559738?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katharina Weiß
Frederic Hilkenmeier
Ingrid Scharlau
spellingShingle Katharina Weiß
Frederic Hilkenmeier
Ingrid Scharlau
Attention and the speed of information processing: posterior entry for unattended stimuli instead of prior entry for attended stimuli.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Katharina Weiß
Frederic Hilkenmeier
Ingrid Scharlau
author_sort Katharina Weiß
title Attention and the speed of information processing: posterior entry for unattended stimuli instead of prior entry for attended stimuli.
title_short Attention and the speed of information processing: posterior entry for unattended stimuli instead of prior entry for attended stimuli.
title_full Attention and the speed of information processing: posterior entry for unattended stimuli instead of prior entry for attended stimuli.
title_fullStr Attention and the speed of information processing: posterior entry for unattended stimuli instead of prior entry for attended stimuli.
title_full_unstemmed Attention and the speed of information processing: posterior entry for unattended stimuli instead of prior entry for attended stimuli.
title_sort attention and the speed of information processing: posterior entry for unattended stimuli instead of prior entry for attended stimuli.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Why are nearly simultaneous stimuli frequently perceived in reversed order? The origin of errors in temporal judgments is a question older than experimental psychology itself. One of the earliest suspects is attention. According to the concept of prior entry, attention accelerates attended stimuli; thus they have "prior entry" to perceptive processing stages, including consciousness. Although latency advantages for attended stimuli have been revealed in psychophysical studies many times, these measures (e.g. temporal order judgments, simultaneity judgments) cannot test the prior-entry hypothesis completely. Since they assess latency differences between an attended and an unattended stimulus, they cannot distinguish between faster processing of attended stimuli and slower processing of unattended stimuli. Therefore, we present a novel paradigm providing separate estimates for processing advantages respectively disadvantages of attended and unattended stimuli. We found that deceleration of unattended stimuli contributes more strongly to the prior-entry illusion than acceleration of attended stimuli. Thus, in the temporal domain, attention fulfills its selective function primarily by deceleration of unattended stimuli. That means it is actually posterior entry, not prior entry which accounts for the largest part of the effect.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3559738?pdf=render
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AT frederichilkenmeier attentionandthespeedofinformationprocessingposteriorentryforunattendedstimuliinsteadofpriorentryforattendedstimuli
AT ingridscharlau attentionandthespeedofinformationprocessingposteriorentryforunattendedstimuliinsteadofpriorentryforattendedstimuli
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