Attention: Tracking, shifting

Poster Session: Monday, May 20, 2024, 8:30 am – 12:30 pm, Pavilion

Abstract#

Poster Title

First Author 

43.448

Macaque monkeys follow gaze cues of human avatars

Aboutorabi, Ehsan

43.454

The nature and computation of attentional effort: A peak/end rule integrating over moment-by-moment effort during multiple-object tracking

Belledonne, Mario

43.447

Examining the influence of cognitive processing orientation on tracking performance using a modified multiple object tracking task

Fu, Mengzhu

43.446

Attentional Switching in Infants as a Function of Birth Experience: An Eye Movement Study

Kay, Shir

43.456

The speed of attentional shift is similar for exogenous and endogenous cues within anti-cue tasks

Mohiar, Yara

43.452

Pupillometric imaging reveals the spatiotemporal dynamics of covert attention

Naber, Marnix

43.449

Multiple object tracking as a measure of sustained attention and relation with fluid reasoning

Perelmiter, Taryn

43.445

Attentional Effect in Motion-Induced Position Shift

Shams, Mohammad

43.450

Multiple-Object-Tracking Supported by Parvocellular, Magnocellular, and Koniocellular Pathways

Shi, Linan

43.453

Sometimes more (overlap) is better! Action plan overlap impacts the interference between visually-guided touch and multiple-object tracking (MOT)

Terry, Mallory E.

43.451

Non-image forming vision as measured through ipRGC-mediated pupil constriction is not modulated by covert visual attention

Vilotijević, Ana

43.455

The reset effect of attention depends on the phase of ongoing attention oscillation

YIN, DIKANG