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      Two attentional deficits in serial target search: the visual attentional blink and an amodal task-switch deficit.

      Journal of Experimental Psychology. Learning, Memory, and Cognition
      Adult, Attention, Discrimination Learning, Female, Humans, Male, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Reaction Time, Serial Learning, Speech Perception

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          Abstract

          When monitoring a rapid serial visual presentation at 100 ms per item for 2 targets among distractors, viewers have difficulty reporting the 2nd target (T2) when it appears 200-500 ms after the onset of the 1st letter target (T1): an attentional blink (AB; M. M. Chun & M. C. Potter, 1995b; J. E. Raymond, K. L. Shapiro, & K. M. Arnell, 1992). Does the same deficit occur with auditory search? The authors compared search for auditory, visual, and cross-modal targets in 2 tasks: (a) identifying 2 target letters among digits (Experiments 1-3 and 5) or digits among letters (Experiment 6), and (b) identifying 1 digit among letters and deciding whether an X occurred among the subsequent letters (Experiment 4). In the experiments using the 1st task, the standard AB was found only when both targets were visual. In the 2nd task, with a change in selective set from T1 to T2, a task-switching deficit was obtained regardless of target modality.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          9699304
          10.1037//0278-7393.24.4.979

          Chemistry
          Adult,Attention,Discrimination Learning,Female,Humans,Male,Pattern Recognition, Visual,Reaction Time,Serial Learning,Speech Perception

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