Abstract

Reaction time in a detection or a location discrimination task was longer when a target appeared at the same location as in the previous trial (inhibition of return; IOR). However, it became shorter when the task was color or orientation discrimination (facilitation of return: FOR). This dichotomy was observed in the single target as well as in the popout displays. In additional experiments, vernier, size, and luminance discriminations all led to FOR, whereas eye-movement and arm-reaching tasks led to IOR. Moreover, identical stimuli could lead to the opposite patterns of result depending on the nature of the task: inhibition in global location tasks, and facilitation in feature analysis tasks. These may correspond to "where" vs "what" or "action" vs "recognition" pathways neurophysiologically.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call