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Awareness in contextual cueing of visual search as measured with concurrent access- and phenomenal-consciousness tasks
2012
Journal of Vision
In visual search, context information can serve as a cue to guide attention to the target location. When observers repeatedly encounter displays with identical target-distractor arrangements, reaction times (RTs) are faster for repeated relative to nonrepeated displays, the latter containing novel configurations. This effect has been termed "contextual cueing." The present study asked whether information about the target location in repeated displays is "explicit" (or "conscious") in nature. To
doi:10.1167/12.11.25
pmid:23104818
fatcat:xqai6sopgzhydaiw2y6xxmj2fi