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Psychophysiological evidence for continuous information transmission between visual search and response processes.
69
Citations
4
References
1991
Year
Affective NeuroscienceCognitionMotor ControlMotor LevelPerceptionAttentionResponse ProcessesVisual Cognitive NeurosciencePsychologyReaction TimeSocial SciencesContinuous Information TransmissionKinesiologyVisual CognitionPsychophysiologyCognitive NeurosciencePsychophysicsHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceMotor LevelsVisuomotor LearningVisual SearchVision ResearchVisual ProcessingPerception-action LoopVisual FunctionSensorimotor TransformationEye TrackingNeuroscience
This study was designed to test whether information transmission between the perceptual and motor levels occurs continuously or in discrete steps. Ss performed visual search across nontargets that shared visual features with one of two possible targets, each assigned to a different response. In addition to reaction time, psychophysiological measures were used to assess the duration of target search and the onset of central and peripheral motor activity. Nontargets sharing features with a target selectively activated the response associated with that target, even when it was not present in the display. This suggests that information transmission to the motor level can consist of fine-grained visual information and that visual search and response selection occur in parallel.
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