Implicit but not Explicit Feature Binding in a Balint's Patient
- 1 March 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Visual Cognition
- Vol. 5 (1) , 157-181
- https://doi.org/10.1080/713756779
Abstract
Visual perception is often conceptualized as a process of extracting visual attributes from the stimulus, from simple features like colour and orientation to high-level identities of words and objects. However, an important further task forvision is to solve the “binding problem”—to determinewhich visual attributes go together to form one object (e.g. Treisman & Gelade, 1980). Recent evidence suggests thatthe parietal lobes are critical forfeaturebinding (e.g.Friedman-Hill, Robertson, & Treisman, 1995). We examined a patient with bilateral parietooccipital damage and found that, while he was at chance on an explicit binding task (reporting which of two words was coloured), an implicit reaction time measure showed thatcorrectcolour-word bindings were nonetheless represented in his visual system. These results (1) show a dissociation between implicit and explicit binding and (2) suggest that the parietal lobes may be critical for explicit but not implicit binding. The implications of these results for feature integration theory are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Superior Parietal Cortex Activation During Spatial Attention Shifts and Visual Feature ConjunctionScience, 1995
- Reading of letters and words in a patient with Balint's syndromeNeuropsychologia, 1994
- Visual Feature Integration with an Attention DeficitBrain and Cognition, 1994
- Visual Processing without Awareness: Evidence from Unilateral NeglectJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 1992
- SIMULTANAGNOSIABrain, 1991
- Attention and Feature Integration: Illusory Conjunctions in a Patient with a Parietal Lobe LesionPsychological Science, 1991
- CorrespondenceJournal of Child Neurology, 1991
- Attentional Modulation of Neural Processing of Shape, Color, and Velocity in HumansScience, 1990
- Is Posner's "beam" the same as Treisman's "glue"?: On the relation between visual orienting and feature integration theory.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1987
- UNILATERAL NEGLECT, REPRESENTATIONAL SCHEMA AND CONSCIOUSNESSBrain, 1979