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Journal article

The combined effects of plane disorientation and foreshortening on picture naming: one manipulation or two?

Abstract:
Objects disoriented in plane away from the upright and objects rotated in depth producing foreshortening are harder to identify than canonical views. In Experiments 1 and 2, participants named pictures of familiar objects. There was no interaction between plane and depth rotation effects on initial presentation or after practice. Experiment 3 was a dual-task psychological refractory period study. Participants classified a high-low tone with a speeded keypress and then named a canonical, plane-rotated, or foreshortened view of an object. Naming was slower when the picture was presented 50 ms after the tone compared with 800 ms after the tone. Plane rotation effects were reduced (but not eliminated) at the short tone-picture stimulus onset asynchrony, but foreshortening effects were not reduced. The results implicate an early, prebottleneck locus for some processes compensating for plane rotation and a subsequent bottleneck or postbottleneck locus for compensation for foreshortening.
Publication status:
Published

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Publisher copy:
10.1037//0096-1523.26.2.568

Authors


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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MSD
Department:
Experimental Psychology
Role:
Author


Journal:
Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance More from this journal
Volume:
26
Issue:
2
Pages:
568-581
Publication date:
2000-04-01
DOI:
EISSN:
1939-1277
ISSN:
0096-1523


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:311588
UUID:
uuid:14eef81a-fc64-417a-8400-da50f2af1a51
Local pid:
pubs:311588
Source identifiers:
311588
Deposit date:
2013-11-17

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