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  1. Evidence against a speed limit in multiple object tracking.Zenon Pylyshyn, Franconeri, Lin, Fisher & Enns - manuscript
    in press, Psychonomic Bulletin & Review.
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  • Visual crowding: a fundamental limit on conscious perception and object recognition.David Whitney & Dennis M. Levi - 2011 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 15 (4):160-168.
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  • The role of location indexes in spatial perception: A sketch of the FINST spatial-index model.Zenon Pylyshyn - 1989 - Cognition 32 (1):65-97.
    Marr (1982) may have been one of the rst vision researchers to insist that in modeling vision it is important to separate the location of visual features from their type. He argued that in early stages of visual processing there must be “place tokens” that enable subsequent stages of the visual system to treat locations independent of what specic feature type was at that location. Thus, in certain respects a collinear array of diverse features could still be perceived as a (...)
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  • Exhausting attentional tracking resources with a single fast-moving object.Alex O. Holcombe & Wei-Ying Chen - 2012 - Cognition 123 (2):218-228.
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  • Swapping or dropping? Electrophysiological measures of difficulty during multiple object tracking.Trafton Drew, Todd S. Horowitz & Edward K. Vogel - 2013 - Cognition 126 (2):213-223.
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  • Some puzzling findings in multiple object tracking (MOT): II. Inhibition of moving nontargets.Zenon Pylyshyn - manuscript
    We present three studies examining whether multiple-object tracking (MOT) benefits from the active inhibition of nontargets, as proposed in (Pylyshyn, 2004). Using a probedot technique, the first study showed poorer probe detection on nontargets than on either the targets being tracked or in the empty space between objects. The second study used a matching nontracking task to control for possible masking of probes, independent of target tracking. The third study examined how localized the inhibition is to individual nontargets. The result (...)
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  • Some puzzling findings in multiple object tracking: I. Tracking without keeping track of object identities.Zenon Pylyshyn - manuscript
    The task of tracking a small number (about four or five) visual targets within a larger set of identical items, each of which moves randomly and independently, has been used extensively to study object-based attention. Analysis of this multiple object tracking (MOT) task shows that it logically entails solving the correspondence problem for each target over time, and thus that the individuality of each of the targets must be tracked. This suggests that when successfully tracking objects, observers must also keep (...)
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  • Tracking multiple independent targets: Evidence for a parallel tracking mechanism.Zenon Pylyshyn - manuscript
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