Poster Sessions

Saturday Morning Posters, Pavilion

Poster Session: Saturday, May 18, 2024, 8:30 am – 12:30 pm, Pavilion

Abstract#

Poster Title

First Author

Session

23.458

Dissociating sensory, decisional, and metacognitive noise in perceptual decision making

zheng, yunxuan

Decision Making: Perceptual decision making 1

23.438

Sensitivity to highly salient features in dynamic inattentional blindness

Nartker, Makaela

Attention: Inattention, attentional blindness, suppression

23.415

Memory-based attentional capture is one-shot

Kerzel, Dirk

Attention: Capture

23.430

Guidance by visual and verbal representations during visual search

Jimenez, Mikel

Attention: Neural mechanisms

23.451

Active or passive inference? Effects of goal-directed actions on perceptual decisions

Lageman, Jet

Decision Making: Decision making and actions

23.401

Top-down instructions influence the attentional weight on color and shape dimensions during redundant search

Gong, Zixu

Visual Search: Attention, phenomena 1

23.439

Asymmetry for shading direction in visual search persists in inattentional blindness

Han, ShuiEr

Attention: Inattention, attentional blindness, suppression

23.459

Estimating and integrating the uncertainty of naturalistic stimuli

Plate, Corey

Decision Making: Perceptual decision making 1

23.431

The sensitivity of the dominant rhythm desynchronization to visual stimuli across infancy: a study using longitudinal and cross-sectional data

Elhamiasl, Mina

Attention: Neural mechanisms

23.452

Generating Saccades for Reducing Uncertainty: Cognitive and Sensorimotor Trade-Offs

Jiwa, Matthew

Decision Making: Decision making and actions

23.416

Attentional control through colour-location associations induces contingent capture

Joubran, Samantha

Attention: Capture

23.402

Where you attend is where you click: Attention guides selection actions in visual foraging with conjunction objects

Tünnermann, Jan

Visual Search: Attention, phenomena 1

23.432

From Preparatory Attention to Stimulus Selection: Neural Mechanisms Revealed by Multivariate Analysis of fMRI Data

Yang, Qiang

Attention: Neural mechanisms

23.403

Manipulating Processing Biases to Mitigate the Low Prevalence Effect

Celani, Robin

Visual Search: Attention, phenomena 1

23.440

Elucidating Fluctuations of Visual Attention: Reaction Time Variability and Mind-Wandering Provide Complementary Insights

Chidharom, Matthieu

Attention: Inattention, attentional blindness, suppression

23.453

Global Route Selection using Local Visual Information

Engstrom, Cassandra

Decision Making: Decision making and actions

23.460

IMPROVING META-COGNITION WITH PRACTICE

G P, Akash Raj

Decision Making: Perceptual decision making 1

23.417

Beyond Distraction: Exploring the Conditions of Task-Irrelevant Feature Reinstatement and Working Memory-Based Capture during Visual Search

Kespe, Jessica

Attention: Capture

23.441

Inattentional blindness for a salient target in visual search: Finding a surprisingly easy target can be surprisingly hard

Ernst, Daniel

Attention: Inattention, attentional blindness, suppression

23.433

Alpha traveling waves index spatial attention

Fakche, Camille

Attention: Neural mechanisms

23.454

Saccadic decision making based on uncertain auditory cues in monkey superior colliculus

Conroy, Christopher

Decision Making: Decision making and actions

23.461

Multimodal metaperception: insights from multisensory integration

Domenici, Nicola

Decision Making: Perceptual decision making 1

23.418

Do physical effort and electrical stimulations similarly affect attentional capture?

Grégoire, Laurent

Attention: Capture

23.404

The Target Prevalence Effect is Mitigated by Less Resource Demanding Stimuli

Eich, Brandon

Visual Search: Attention, phenomena 1

23.434

Sustaining attention under monitoring conditions: What changes in the brain when attention lapses?

Rich, Anina

Attention: Neural mechanisms

23.419

From attention capture to social coordination: “Abrupt onset” rallies joint planning

Cheng, Shaozhe

Attention: Capture

23.455

Stimulus-response mapping shapes unintended response duration modulation in duration judgment tasks

Yeo, Juhyeon

Decision Making: Decision making and actions

23.405

Location cueing from color distributions

Blondé, Philippe

Visual Search: Attention, phenomena 1

23.462

Confidence responses in global motion discrimination task are well predicted by visual reliability

Oluk, Can

Decision Making: Perceptual decision making 1

23.443

Spatial Attention is Captured and Suppressed by Emotional Pictures in High Trait Anxiety

Kim, Minwoo JB

Attention: Inattention, attentional blindness, suppression

23.406

Proportion of color proportionally influences search guidance for color conjunctions and real-world objects

Goetz, Jessica N.

Visual Search: Attention, phenomena 1

23.444

Distractor location frequencies better account for the instantiation of learned distractor suppression than do reinforcement learning prediction errors

Sali, Anthony W.

Attention: Inattention, attentional blindness, suppression

23.463

Repulsion biases in motion perception are attenuated by waiting

Qian, C. Stella

Decision Making: Perceptual decision making 1

23.435

The neural bases of fluctuations in shift readiness and sustained attention

Toledo, Anna B.

Attention: Neural mechanisms

23.420

Does contingent capture occur in driving scenes?

Eng, Rachel A.

Attention: Capture

23.456

Visual factors that determine uncertainty in rapid interceptive movements

Akande, Abibat A.

Decision Making: Decision making and actions

23.436

Both Target and Distractor are Sampled Rhythmically in a Motion Detection Task

Xiong, Changhao

Attention: Neural mechanisms

23.407

Searching for the alerting effect: the optimal SOA is longer in compound – than in simple – search tasks.

Jankovic, Nadja

Visual Search: Attention, phenomena 1

23.421

Neural evidence for attentional capture by salient distractors

Lin, Rongqi

Attention: Capture

23.445

Distractor suppression operates in retinotopic coordinates

Ilksoy, Yayla

Attention: Inattention, attentional blindness, suppression

23.457

Does social context influence intention, prediction and motor behavior during a simple in-person card game?

Jantz, Bethany B.

Decision Making: Decision making and actions

23.464

Feedback reduces but does not eliminate confirmation bias

Maechler, Marvin R.

Decision Making: Perceptual decision making 1

23.437

Theta- and alpha-band frequency advantages for sensory gating

Cha, Oakyoon

Attention: Neural mechanisms

23.446

Electrophysiological Evidence for Learned Feature Suppression

Hanne, Aylin A.

Attention: Inattention, attentional blindness, suppression

23.465

Matching identical stimuli with the method of adjustment produces counter-intuitive biases

Mao, Jiang

Decision Making: Perceptual decision making 1

23.422

Assessing Connectivity Between Brain Regions During Object Category-Tuned Attention and Spatial Distraction

Okojie, Ehi

Attention: Capture

23.408

What makes an optimal visual searcher? Insights from post-trial memory probes

Zhang, Tianyu

Visual Search: Attention, phenomena 1

23.409

Training on a difficult search task improves untrained easier search as well

Hulleman, Johan

Visual Search: Attention, phenomena 1

23.423

Cues improve visual working memory but fail to counteract the effects of salience

Constant, Martin

Attention: Capture

23.447

The coordinate system of suppression in dynamic contexts

Chang, Seah

Attention: Inattention, attentional blindness, suppression

23.466

Sequential evidence accumulation is a resource-rational process

Fang, Mengting

Decision Making: Perceptual decision making 1

23.467

Opposing Effects of Ongoing Alpha-Band Activity on Magno- and Parvo-Mediated Detection

Pilipenko, April

Decision Making: Perceptual decision making 1

23.448

Learning to Suppress Color Singletons via Feature-Based Regularities

Stilwell, Brad T.

Attention: Inattention, attentional blindness, suppression

23.410

Searching for Interactive People: Visual Search Asymmetry in Dynamic Dyads

Wu, Jinglan

Visual Search: Attention, phenomena 1

23.424

Does anticipated effort modulate attentional biases for aversively conditioned stimuli?

McKinney, Molly

Attention: Capture

23.411

What, where, when did I find this? Associative learning in hybrid search.

Wiegand, Iris

Visual Search: Attention, phenomena 1

23.449

Evidence against the low-salience criticism of signal suppression

Gaspelin, Nicholas

Attention: Inattention, attentional blindness, suppression

23.425

Experience-dependent distractor rejection occurs rapidly but is difficult measure

Savelson, Isaac

Attention: Capture

23.450

Decreased perceptual sensitivity during attention shifts

Zhang, Zixiao

Attention: Inattention, attentional blindness, suppression

23.426

Object Stability, Attention, and Temporal Order Judgments

Yucer, Ece

Attention: Capture

23.412

We Need an Ontology of Visual Search Tasks

Racioppo, Keith

Visual Search: Attention, phenomena 1

23.427

On the timing of overt attention deployment: Eye-movement evidence for the Priority Accumulation Framework

Sasi, Mor

Attention: Capture

23.413

Estimating capacity limitations in ensemble averaging using set size manipulations and individual differences in search performance

Starling, Laramie

Visual Search: Attention, phenomena 1

23.428

The Role of Spatial Reference Frame in Implicit Distractor Location Learning

Chen, Litian

Attention: Capture

23.414

Language experience may modulate attentional disengagement to scene grammar inconsistencies during free-viewing

Vingron, Naomi

Visual Search: Attention, phenomena 1

23.429

Tracking the temporal dynamics of statistically learned distractor suppression using SSVEP’s

Duncan, Dock H.

Attention: Capture

Undergraduate Just-In-Time Poster Submissions

VSS 2024 is pleased to announce that the “Just-In-Time” poster sessions for undergraduate students working on independent research projects are now open for submissions. Posters will be presented in person at the annual meeting in one of two sessions, either Saturday, May 18 or Monday, May 20.

VSS welcomes and encourages submissions from a diverse group of eligible students across the globe. To help accomplish this goal we are asking that you share this information with any programs within your institutions that sponsor or promote research for undergraduate students.

Eligibility

The submissions to these sessions are limited to students who:

  • Are currently enrolled in a 3-year or 4-year program leading to the bachelor’s degree. Or,
  • Have earned a bachelor’s degree in a 3-year program and are currently in their first year of study in a program leading to a master’s degree. (Students studying in European universities may fall into this category). Those who already have an abstract accepted for VSS 2024 are not eligible.

Space is limited. The window for submissions will open on March 1 and submissions will be accepted through April 1. Presenters will be informed of acceptance by April 11.

You must be a current student member (for 2024) to submit an abstract.

A limited number of travel grants are available for undergraduate students who submit abstracts during the Just-in-Time submission period. Travel application information will be available upon submission of the student’s abstract.

VSS welcomes and encourages submissions from a diverse group of eligible students across the globe. To help accomplish this goal we are asking that you share this information with any programs within your institutions that sponsor or promote research for undergraduate students. For details and to submit an abstract, go to Undergraduate Just-In-time Poster Submission Guidelines.

Submission Policies

  • A student may submit only one abstract to the Just-In-Time session.
  • The student must be a current VSS member (for 2024).
  • The student must be registered to attend VSS.
  • Those who already have an abstract accepted for VSS 2024 are not eligible to submit to the Just-In-Time session.
  • Abstracts must be work that has not been accepted for publication or published at the time of submission.
  • Poster presenter substitutions are not permitted.

Abstract Format

Abstracts are limited to 300 words. This does not include title, authors, and affiliations. Additional space is provided for funding acknowledgments and for declaration of commercial interests and conflicts.

Your abstract should consist of an introduction, methods and results sections, and a conclusion. It is not required that the sections be explicitly labeled as such. It is, however, important that each abstract contains sufficiently detailed descriptions of the methods and the results. Please do not submit an abstract of work that you are planning to do or work without sufficient results to reach a clear conclusion. Such abstracts will not be accepted.

Per the VSS Disclosure of Conflict of Interest Policy, authors must reveal any commercial interests or other potential conflicts of interest that they have related to the work described. Any conflicts of interest must be declared on your poster or talk slides.

Please complete your submission carefully. All abstracts must be in final form. Abstracts are not proofread or corrected in any way prior to publication. Typos and other errors cannot be corrected after the deadline. You may edit your abstract as much as you like until the submission deadline.

Given the just-in-time deadline, some aspects will differ from regular VSS submissions. Submissions will be reviewed by members of the VSS Board of Directors and designates. Accepted abstracts will appear in the VSS 2024 program, but unlike submissions accepted following the December review, “Just-In-Time” abstracts will not appear in the Journal of Vision.

If you have any questions, please contact our office at .

Submission Schedule

Submissions Open: March 1, 2024
Submissions Close: April 1, 2024
Undergraduate Travel Award Application Deadline: April 5, 2024
Notification of Accepted Abstracts: April 11, 2024

How to Submit

Undergraduate Just-in-Time Poster Submissions are Closed.