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  1. Do threatening stimuli draw or hold visual attention in subclinical anxiety?Elaine Fox, Riccardo Russo, Robert Bowles & Kevin Dutton - 2001 - Journal of Experimental Psychology: General 130 (4):681.
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  • Contextual guidance of eye movements and attention in real-world scenes: The role of global features in object search.Antonio Torralba, Aude Oliva, Monica S. Castelhano & John M. Henderson - 2006 - Psychological Review 113 (4):766-786.
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  • Personality, motivation, and performance: A theory of the relationship between individual differences and information processing.Michael S. Humphreys & William Revelle - 1984 - Psychological Review 91 (2):153-184.
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  • A theory of eye movements during target acquisition.Gregory J. Zelinsky - 2008 - Psychological Review 115 (4):787-835.
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  • The influence of complexity and novelty in visual figures on orienting responses.D. E. Berlyne - 1958 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 55 (3):289.
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  • Computational Modelling of Visual Attention.Laurent Itti & Christof Koch - 2001 - Nature Reviews Neuroscience 2 (3):194–203.
    Five important trends have emerged from recent work on computational models of focal visual attention that emphasize the bottom-up, image-based control of attentional deployment. First, the perceptual saliency of stimuli critically depends on the surrounding context. Second, a unique 'saliency map' that topographically encodes for stimulus conspicuity over the visual scene has proved to be an efficient and plausible bottom-up control strategy. Third, inhibition of return, the process by which the currently attended location is prevented from being attended again, is (...)
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