TY - JOUR
T1 - Feature saliency affects delayed matching of an attended feature
AU - Yang, Cheng Ta
AU - Chiu, Yu Chin
AU - Yeh, Yei Yu
N1 - Funding Information:
Correspondence should be addressed to Cheng-Ta Yang, Department of Psychology, National Cheng Kung University, No. 1, University Rd., Tainan, Taiwan 701. E-mail: yangct@mail.ncku.edu.tw This work was supported by grants from National Science Council to C.-T. Yang (NSC 92-2815-C-002-070-H and NSC 98-2410-H-006-118-MY2) and to Y.-Y. Yeh (NSC 96-2413-H-002-007-MY3). We thank S.-H. Lin and Y.-J. Chen for their assistance in stimulus generation and C.-J. Wu for her assistance in figure production. Parts of the results were presented at the 15th meeting of Object, Perception, Attention, and Memory in Long Beach, CA.
PY - 2012/9/1
Y1 - 2012/9/1
N2 - We examined how top-down attentional modulation and bottom-up stimulus saliency interact with feature memory. Experiment 1 used a delayed-matching-to- sample (DMS) task to examine the relative saliency between features by observing the relative accuracy of recognition at different stimulus durations. Feature salience decreased according to the following order: colour, form, and texture. In a modified DMS task (Experiments 2 and 3), participants were required to attend to one of three features and ignore the others. After a delay, they were required to choose which of the two test stimuli matched the reference stimulus on the attended feature, disregarding other task-irrelevant features. The target was either identical to the reference stimulus or mismatched the reference stimulus on one of the irrelevant features. The results showed that colour matching was affected neither by a form change nor by a texture change. Form matching was affected by a colour change, and texture matching was affected by a colour or form change. These results are consistent with the relative saliency hypothesis. Even when all features of an attended object are maintained, a relatively more salient task-irrelevant feature can interfere with the delayed recognition of a less salient feature.
AB - We examined how top-down attentional modulation and bottom-up stimulus saliency interact with feature memory. Experiment 1 used a delayed-matching-to- sample (DMS) task to examine the relative saliency between features by observing the relative accuracy of recognition at different stimulus durations. Feature salience decreased according to the following order: colour, form, and texture. In a modified DMS task (Experiments 2 and 3), participants were required to attend to one of three features and ignore the others. After a delay, they were required to choose which of the two test stimuli matched the reference stimulus on the attended feature, disregarding other task-irrelevant features. The target was either identical to the reference stimulus or mismatched the reference stimulus on one of the irrelevant features. The results showed that colour matching was affected neither by a form change nor by a texture change. Form matching was affected by a colour change, and texture matching was affected by a colour or form change. These results are consistent with the relative saliency hypothesis. Even when all features of an attended object are maintained, a relatively more salient task-irrelevant feature can interfere with the delayed recognition of a less salient feature.
KW - Attentional modulation
KW - Delayed-matching-to-sample task
KW - Feature saliency
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U2 - 10.1080/20445911.2012.683782
DO - 10.1080/20445911.2012.683782
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84865497030
SN - 2044-5911
VL - 24
SP - 714
EP - 726
JO - Journal of Cognitive Psychology
JF - Journal of Cognitive Psychology
IS - 6
ER -