Letters Lost: Capturing Appearance in Crowded Peripheral Vision Reveals a New Kind of Masking

Sayim, Bilge; Taylor, Henry (2019). Letters Lost: Capturing Appearance in Crowded Peripheral Vision Reveals a New Kind of Masking. Psychological science, 30(7), pp. 1082-1086. Sage Publications 10.1177/0956797619847166

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Peripheral vision is strongly limited by crowding, the deleterious influence of flanking items on target perception. Distinguishing what is seen from what is merely inferred in crowding is difficult because task demands and prior knowledge may influence observers' reports. Here, we used a standard identification task in which participants were susceptible to these influences, and to minimize them, we used a free-report-and-drawing paradigm. Three letters were presented in the periphery. In Experiment 1, 10 participants were asked to identify the central target letter. In Experiment 2, 25 participants freely named and drew what they saw. When three identical letters were presented, performance was almost perfect in Experiment 1, but it was very poor in Experiment 2, in which most participants reported only two letters. Our study reveals limitations of standard crowding paradigms and uncovers a hitherto unrecognized effect that we call redundancy masking.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

07 Faculty of Human Sciences > Institute of Psychology > Cognitive Psychology, Perception and Methodology

UniBE Contributor:

Sayim, Bilge

Subjects:

100 Philosophy > 150 Psychology

ISSN:

0956-7976

Publisher:

Sage Publications

Funders:

[UNSPECIFIED] Swiss National Science Foundation (PP00P1_163723) ; [UNSPECIFIED] Early Career Fellowship from the Leverhulme Trust; University of Birmingham (ECF-2015-088).

Language:

English

Submitter:

Bilge Sayim

Date Deposited:

17 Apr 2020 16:47

Last Modified:

05 Dec 2022 15:38

Publisher DOI:

10.1177/0956797619847166

PubMed ID:

31120814

BORIS DOI:

10.7892/boris.142840

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/142840

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