Selective Attention, Visual Laterality, Awareness, and Perceiving the Meaning of Parafoveally Presented Words
Open Access
- 1 November 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A
- Vol. 40 (4) , 615-652
- https://doi.org/10.1080/14640748808402291
Abstract
Four experiments are reported investigating the effect of selective attention on the semantic encoding of parafoveally presented words. In Experiments 1 and 2 a right visual field (RVF) performance bias was found when subjects attended to words that could appear either left or right of centre (attend-side condition). When subjects attended centrally and ignored lateral distractor words (attendcentre condition) there was an inhibitory effect of word meaning from left visual field (LVF) distractors. Both inhibitory and facilitatory effects of semantic category were observed from unattended words in Experiments 3 and 4. The pattern of effects depended upon the direction of spatial bias in an attend-side condition. Both kinds of effect occurred even for subjects who were unable to make consciously directed semantic category decisions to words at the same eccentricity (4°) and exposure time (15 msec) as ignored distractors in the attend-centre condition. Implications of these findings for theories of selective attention, for the issue of semantic encoding independent of conscious awareness, and for theories of the relationship between lateral performance biases and functional hemispheric asymmetry are discussed.This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Parafoveal Words are Effective in Both Hemifields: Preattentive Processing of Semantic and Phonological CodesPerception, 1983
- Spatial extent of attention to letters and words.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1983
- Comparative Processing of Imageable Nouns in the Left and Right Visual FieldsCortex, 1981
- Parafoveal information is not sufficient to produce semantic or visual primingPerception & Psychophysics, 1981
- Expectations increase the benefit derived from parafoveal visual information in reading words aloud.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1981
- Differential processing of Kanji and Kana stimuli in Japanese people: Some implications from stroop-test resultsNeuropsychologia, 1981
- The locus of interference in the perception of simultaneous stimuli.Psychological Review, 1980
- Attention, practice, and semantic targets.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1976
- Effects of noise letters upon the identification of a target letter in a nonsearch taskPerception & Psychophysics, 1974
- Attention: Some theoretical considerations.Psychological Review, 1963