scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P6179 | Dimensions Publication ID | 1016321849 |
P356 | DOI | 10.3758/S13414-013-0425-1 |
P698 | PubMed publication ID | 23359355 |
P5875 | ResearchGate publication ID | 235380787 |
P50 | author | Alex O. Holcombe | Q47679542 |
P2093 | author name string | Wei-Ying Chen | |
Piers D Howe | |||
P2860 | cites work | The Role of the Parietal Lobe in Visual Extinction Studied with Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation | Q29038889 |
Reduction of the crowding effect in spatially adjacent but cortically remote visual stimuli | Q30504477 | ||
Hemifield effects in multiple identity tracking | Q34405600 | ||
Tracking multiple targets with multifocal attention | Q36161730 | ||
Attentional costs in multiple-object tracking | Q36727174 | ||
The uncrowded window of object recognition | Q37283656 | ||
Demand-based dynamic distribution of attention and monitoring of velocities during multiple-object tracking | Q37373648 | ||
Telephone conversation impairs sustained visual attention via a central bottleneck | Q38385718 | ||
Dynamic binding of identity and location information: a serial model of multiple identity tracking. | Q38397909 | ||
Position representations lag behind targets in multiple object tracking. | Q39728238 | ||
Discrete fixed-resolution representations in visual working memory | Q41612607 | ||
Attentional capacity is undifferentiated: concurrent discrimination of form, color, and motion | Q41704029 | ||
Distinguishing between parallel and serial accounts of multiple object tracking | Q41784301 | ||
Direction information in multiple object tracking is limited by a graded resource | Q42094394 | ||
Effects of target enhancement and distractor suppression on multiple object tracking capacity | Q43275334 | ||
Splitting attention reduces temporal resolution from 7 Hz for tracking one object to <3 Hz when tracking three | Q43487009 | ||
Evidence against a speed limit in multiple-object tracking | Q46367278 | ||
Multiple-object tracking is based on scene, not retinal, coordinates. | Q46434454 | ||
Tracking the changing features of multiple objects: progressively poorer perceptual precision and progressively greater perceptual lag. | Q46688128 | ||
How many objects can you track? Evidence for a resource-limited attentive tracking mechanism | Q46903745 | ||
Attentional effects on concurrent psychophysical discriminations: investigations of a sample-size model | Q47380096 | ||
Tracking multiple objects is limited only by object spacing, not by speed, time, or capacity | Q48811406 | ||
An oscillatory neural model of multiple object tracking. | Q48932369 | ||
Do multielement visual tracking and visual search draw continuously on the same visual attention resources? | Q48946077 | ||
Independent resources for attentional tracking in the left and right visual hemifields | Q48946672 | ||
The spatial resolution of visual attention | Q49029201 | ||
Limits of attentive tracking reveal temporal properties of attention | Q49049215 | ||
Multielement visual tracking: attention and perceptual organization | Q49161539 | ||
Exhausting attentional tracking resources with a single fast-moving object. | Q50670247 | ||
Multiple Trajectory Tracking | Q59210739 | ||
P433 | issue | 4 | |
P304 | page(s) | 710-725 | |
P577 | publication date | 2013-05-01 | |
P1433 | published in | Attention, Perception and Psychophysics | Q15762491 |
P1476 | title | Resource demands of object tracking and differential allocation of the resource | |
P478 | volume | 75 |
Q52532519 | Engagement of the motor system in position monitoring: reduced distractor suppression and effects of internal representation quality on motor kinematics. |
Q94468458 | How does the human visual system compare the speeds of spatially separated objects? |
Q50615471 | Multiple-object tracking while driving: the multiple-vehicle tracking task. |
Q39353592 | Studying visual attention using the multiple object tracking paradigm: A tutorial review |
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