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  1. Attention: some theoretical considerations.J. A. Deutsch & D. Deutsch - 1963 - Psychological Review 70 (1):80-90.
    The selection of wanted from unwanted messages requires discriminatory mechanisms of as great a complexity as those in normal perception, as is indicated by behavioral evidence. The results of neurophysiology experiments on selective attention are compatible with this supposition. This presents a difficulty for Filter theory. Another mechanism is proposed, which assumes the existence of a shifting reference standard, which takes up the level of the most important arriving signal. The way such importance is determined in the system is further (...)
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  • Forty-five years after Broadbent (1958): Still no identification without attention.Joel Lachter, Kenneth I. Forster & Eric Ruthruff - 2004 - Psychological Review 111 (4):880-913.
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  • The locus of interference in the perception of simultaneous stimuli.John Duncan - 1980 - Psychological Review 87 (3):272-300.
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  • Curious eyes: Individual differences in personality predict eye movement behavior in scene-viewing.Evan F. Risko, Nicola C. Anderson, Sophie Lanthier & Alan Kingstone - 2012 - Cognition 122 (1):86-90.
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  • How pervasive is mind wandering, really?Paul Seli, Roger E. Beaty, James Allan Cheyne, Daniel Smilek, Jonathan Oakman & Daniel L. Schacter - 2018 - Consciousness and Cognition 66:74-78.
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  • Eye Movements During Everyday Behavior Predict Personality Traits.Sabrina Hoppe, Tobias Loetscher, Stephanie A. Morey & Andreas Bulling - 2018 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 12.
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  • Seeing to hear better: evidence for early audio-visual interactions in speech identification.Jean-Luc Schwartz, Frédéric Berthommier & Christophe Savariaux - 2004 - Cognition 93 (2):69-78.
    Lip reading is the ability to partially understand speech by looking at the speaker's lips. It improves the intelligibility of speech in noise when audio-visual perception is compared with audio-only perception. A recent set of experiments showed that seeing the speaker's lips also enhances sensitivity to acoustic information, decreasing the auditory detection threshold of speech embedded in noise [J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 109 (2001) 2272; J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 108 (2000) 1197]. However, detection is different from comprehension, and it remains (...)
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  • Attentional load and the consciousness of one’s own name.Szu-Hung Lin & Yei-Yu Yeh - 2014 - Consciousness and Cognition 26:197-203.
    We investigated how the location of one’s own name in a visual display influences its conscious awareness using recall and recognition tests in an inattentional blindness paradigm. The participant’s own name or another person’s name appeared unexpectedly in the center or the periphery of the display during a critical trial under low- or high-attentional search load. The results showed that the majority of participants detected their names under low load regardless of location and test method. Under high load, the majority (...)
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