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Rapid enumeration within a fraction of a single glance: The role of visible persistence in object individuation capacity

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2012

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Informa UK Limited
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Wutz, Andreas, Alfonso Caramazza, and David Melcher. 2012. “Rapid Enumeration Within a Fraction of a Single Glance: The Role of Visible Persistence in Object Individuation Capacity.” Visual Cognition 20 (6) (June): 717–732. doi:10.1080/13506285.2012.686460.

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Abstract

The number of items that can be individuated at a single glance is limited. Here, we investigate object individuation at a higher temporal resolution, in fractions of a single glance. In two experiments involving object individuation we manipulated the duration of visual persistence of the target items with a forward masking procedure. The number of items as well as their stimulus–onset asynchrony (SOA) to the mask was varied independently. The results showed main effects of numerosity and SOA, as well as an interaction. These effects were not caused by a generic reduction of item visibility by the mask. Instead, the SOA manipulation appeared to fractionate the time to access the sensory image. These findings suggest that the capacity limit of 3–4 items found in object individuation is, at least partially, the consequence of the temporal window of access to sensory information.

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Capacity; Object individuation; Sensory memory; Subitizing; Visible persistence

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