Mj. Morgan et al., VISUAL-SEARCH FOR A TILTED TARGET - TESTS OF SPATIAL UNCERTAINTY MODELS, The Quarterly journal of experimental psychology. A, Human experimental psychology, 51(2), 1998, pp. 347-370
We report that spatial cueing of a parafoveal target in the presence o
f distracters enhances orientational acuity for that target. When no d
istracters were present, orientation thresholds were in the range 1-4
degrees. For long exposure times, distracters increased threshold by t
he amount predicted from a winner-takes-all spatial uncertainty model.
For short (100-msec) exposures followed by a random dot mask, the ris
e in threshold with distracters was considerably greater than that pre
dicted from spatial uncertainty. For brief exposures the effect of dis
tracters was greater when the target and distracters were spatially cr
owded rather than widely spaced. Adding a tilt to the distracters in t
he opposite direction to the target increased thresholds still further
. Cueing the target with a spatial painter decreased the effect of dis
tracters, even when they were crowded. We suggest that when attention
cannot be appropriately focused, discrimination is carried out by a re
latively coarse texture analyser, which averages over several elements
, and that focused attention permits the analysis of the target over a
smaller area of space.