[{"citation":{"bibtex":"@article{Scharlau_2007, title={Perceptual latency priming: A measure of attentional facilitation.}, volume={71}, number={6}, journal={Psychological Research}, author={Scharlau, Ingrid}, year={2007}, pages={678–686} }","short":"I. Scharlau, Psychological Research 71 (2007) 678–686.","mla":"Scharlau, Ingrid. “Perceptual Latency Priming: A Measure of Attentional Facilitation.” <i>Psychological Research</i>, vol. 71, no. 6, 2007, pp. 678–86.","apa":"Scharlau, I. (2007). Perceptual latency priming: A measure of attentional facilitation. <i>Psychological Research</i>, <i>71</i>(6), 678–686.","ama":"Scharlau I. Perceptual latency priming: A measure of attentional facilitation. <i>Psychological Research</i>. 2007;71(6):678-686.","ieee":"I. Scharlau, “Perceptual latency priming: A measure of attentional facilitation.,” <i>Psychological Research</i>, vol. 71, no. 6, pp. 678–686, 2007.","chicago":"Scharlau, Ingrid. “Perceptual Latency Priming: A Measure of Attentional Facilitation.” <i>Psychological Research</i> 71, no. 6 (2007): 678–86."},"intvolume":"        71","page":"678 - 686","year":"2007","issue":"6","publication_status":"published","publication_identifier":{"issn":["0340-0727"]},"main_file_link":[{"url":"https://kw.uni-paderborn.de/fileadmin/fakultaet/Institute/psychologie/Kognitive_Psychologie/Publikationen/Scharlau2006PsychResPLP.pdf","open_access":"1"}],"title":"Perceptual latency priming: A measure of attentional facilitation.","date_created":"2018-12-10T07:05:56Z","author":[{"id":"451","full_name":"Scharlau, Ingrid","orcid":"0000-0003-2364-9489","last_name":"Scharlau","first_name":"Ingrid"}],"volume":71,"oa":"1","date_updated":"2022-06-07T00:20:49Z","status":"public","abstract":[{"text":"The present paper reviews recent research on perceptual latency priming (PLP). PLP is the relative latency advantage--earlier perception--of a visual stimulus that is preceded by another, masked stimulus at its location. The first stimulus attracts attention which accelerates perception of the second stimulus. This facilitation arises even if the first stimulus is visually backward-masked by the second one. The paper summarises research on temporal and spatial properties of PLP and the question whether intentions mediate shifts of attention to external events. Possible sources of PLP besides visuo-spatial attention are discussed. Finally, I give a review of feedforward and reentrant models of PLP and compare them to the empirical evidence. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)","lang":"eng"}],"type":"journal_article","publication":"Psychological Research","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"extern":"1","keyword":["perceptual latency priming","attentional facilitation","visuospatial attention","visual backward masking","prior entry","Attention","Humans","Judgment","Reaction Time","Space Perception","Attention","Priming","Response Latency","Visual Masking","Visuospatial Ability"],"user_id":"42165","department":[{"_id":"424"}],"_id":"6079"},{"citation":{"ieee":"I. Scharlau and G. Horstmann, “Perceptual latency priming and illusory line motion: Facilitation by gradients of attention?,” <i>Advances in Cognitive Psychology</i>, vol. 2, no. 1, pp. 87–97, 2006.","chicago":"Scharlau, Ingrid, and Gernot Horstmann. “Perceptual Latency Priming and Illusory Line Motion: Facilitation by Gradients of Attention?” <i>Advances in Cognitive Psychology</i> 2, no. 1 (2006): 87–97.","ama":"Scharlau I, Horstmann G. Perceptual latency priming and illusory line motion: Facilitation by gradients of attention? <i>Advances in Cognitive Psychology</i>. 2006;2(1):87-97.","short":"I. Scharlau, G. Horstmann, Advances in Cognitive Psychology 2 (2006) 87–97.","bibtex":"@article{Scharlau_Horstmann_2006, title={Perceptual latency priming and illusory line motion: Facilitation by gradients of attention?}, volume={2}, number={1}, journal={Advances in Cognitive Psychology}, author={Scharlau, Ingrid and Horstmann, Gernot}, year={2006}, pages={87–97} }","mla":"Scharlau, Ingrid, and Gernot Horstmann. “Perceptual Latency Priming and Illusory Line Motion: Facilitation by Gradients of Attention?” <i>Advances in Cognitive Psychology</i>, vol. 2, no. 1, 2006, pp. 87–97.","apa":"Scharlau, I., &#38; Horstmann, G. (2006). Perceptual latency priming and illusory line motion: Facilitation by gradients of attention? <i>Advances in Cognitive Psychology</i>, <i>2</i>(1), 87–97."},"page":"87 - 97","intvolume":"         2","year":"2006","issue":"1","publication_status":"published","publication_identifier":{"issn":["1895-1171"]},"title":"Perceptual latency priming and illusory line motion: Facilitation by gradients of attention?","author":[{"first_name":"Ingrid","id":"451","full_name":"Scharlau, Ingrid","last_name":"Scharlau","orcid":"0000-0003-2364-9489"},{"full_name":"Horstmann, Gernot","last_name":"Horstmann","first_name":"Gernot"}],"date_created":"2018-12-10T07:05:32Z","volume":2,"date_updated":"2022-06-07T04:36:36Z","status":"public","abstract":[{"lang":"eng","text":"The phenomena of illusory line motion and perceptual latency priming are both assumed to reflect a facilitation of perceptual latency. The explanation of illusory line motion presupposes that attention is distributed in a gradient fashion whereas this is not a necessary part of the explanation of perceptual latency priming. Two experiments test whether an attentional gradient is present in perceptual latency priming. Evidence for a gradient was found within 2.5° of visual angle around the attended location, but not at a distance of 5° and more. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)"}],"type":"journal_article","publication":"Advances in Cognitive Psychology","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"extern":"1","keyword":["perceptual latency priming","illusory line motion","attention","visual angle","Illusions (Perception)","Priming","Visual Field","Visual Perception","Visual Attention","Spatial Orientation (Perception)"],"user_id":"42165","department":[{"_id":"424"}],"_id":"6077"},{"extern":"1","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"keyword":["response bias","temporal order tasks","attention manipulation","masked primes","perceptual latency priming","Adult","Attention","Discrimination Learning","Female","Humans","Male","Memory","Short-Term","Orientation","Pattern Recognition","Visual","Perceptual Masking","Psychomotor Performance","Psychophysics","Reaction Time","Serial Learning","Attention","Latent Learning","Priming","Response Bias","Visual Perception","Response Latency","Temporal Order (Judgment)"],"department":[{"_id":"424"}],"user_id":"42165","_id":"6068","status":"public","abstract":[{"lang":"eng","text":"Attending to a location shortens the perceptual latency of stimuli appearing at this location (perceptual latency priming). According to attentional explanations, perceptual latency priming relies on the speeded transfer of attended visual information into an internal model. However, doubts about the attentional origin have repeatedly been raised because efforts to minimize response bias have been insufficient in most studies. Five experiments investigated the contribution of a response bias to perceptual latency priming (judgment bias due to the two-alternative forced-choice method and due to the existence of the prime, criterion effects or second-order bias, sensorimotor priming). If any, only small response biases were found. The results thus support the attentional explanation. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)"}],"publication":"Psychological Research","type":"journal_article","main_file_link":[{"open_access":"1","url":"https://kw.uni-paderborn.de/fileadmin/fakultaet/Institute/psychologie/Kognitive_Psychologie/Publikationen/Scharlau2004PsychResResponseBiasFinal.pdf"}],"title":"Evidence against response bias in temporal order tasks with attention manipulation by masked primes.","volume":68,"author":[{"orcid":"0000-0003-2364-9489","last_name":"Scharlau","id":"451","full_name":"Scharlau, Ingrid","first_name":"Ingrid"}],"date_created":"2018-12-10T07:03:30Z","oa":"1","date_updated":"2022-06-07T00:25:03Z","page":"224 - 236","intvolume":"        68","citation":{"ama":"Scharlau I. Evidence against response bias in temporal order tasks with attention manipulation by masked primes. <i>Psychological Research</i>. 2004;68(4):224-236.","chicago":"Scharlau, Ingrid. “Evidence against Response Bias in Temporal Order Tasks with Attention Manipulation by Masked Primes.” <i>Psychological Research</i> 68, no. 4 (2004): 224–36.","ieee":"I. Scharlau, “Evidence against response bias in temporal order tasks with attention manipulation by masked primes.,” <i>Psychological Research</i>, vol. 68, no. 4, pp. 224–236, 2004.","mla":"Scharlau, Ingrid. “Evidence against Response Bias in Temporal Order Tasks with Attention Manipulation by Masked Primes.” <i>Psychological Research</i>, vol. 68, no. 4, 2004, pp. 224–36.","short":"I. Scharlau, Psychological Research 68 (2004) 224–236.","bibtex":"@article{Scharlau_2004, title={Evidence against response bias in temporal order tasks with attention manipulation by masked primes.}, volume={68}, number={4}, journal={Psychological Research}, author={Scharlau, Ingrid}, year={2004}, pages={224–236} }","apa":"Scharlau, I. (2004). Evidence against response bias in temporal order tasks with attention manipulation by masked primes. <i>Psychological Research</i>, <i>68</i>(4), 224–236."},"year":"2004","issue":"4","publication_identifier":{"issn":["0340-0727"]},"publication_status":"published"},{"department":[{"_id":"424"}],"user_id":"42165","_id":"6089","extern":"1","type":"journal_article","status":"public","volume":"57A","author":[{"last_name":"Scharlau","orcid":"0000-0003-2364-9489","full_name":"Scharlau, Ingrid","id":"451","first_name":"Ingrid"}],"oa":"1","date_updated":"2022-06-07T00:25:35Z","main_file_link":[{"open_access":"1","url":"https://kw.uni-paderborn.de/fileadmin/fakultaet/Institute/psychologie/Kognitive_Psychologie/Publikationen/SpliFociFinal.pdf"}],"publication_identifier":{"issn":["0272-4987"]},"publication_status":"published","page":"1411 - 1436","citation":{"short":"I. Scharlau, The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology A: Human Experimental Psychology 57A (2004) 1411–1436.","bibtex":"@article{Scharlau_2004, title={The spatial distribution of attention in perceptual latency priming.}, volume={57A}, number={8}, journal={The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology A: Human Experimental Psychology}, author={Scharlau, Ingrid}, year={2004}, pages={1411–1436} }","mla":"Scharlau, Ingrid. “The Spatial Distribution of Attention in Perceptual Latency Priming.” <i>The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology A: Human Experimental Psychology</i>, vol. 57A, no. 8, 2004, pp. 1411–36.","apa":"Scharlau, I. (2004). The spatial distribution of attention in perceptual latency priming. <i>The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology A: Human Experimental Psychology</i>, <i>57A</i>(8), 1411–1436.","ieee":"I. Scharlau, “The spatial distribution of attention in perceptual latency priming.,” <i>The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology A: Human Experimental Psychology</i>, vol. 57A, no. 8, pp. 1411–1436, 2004.","chicago":"Scharlau, Ingrid. “The Spatial Distribution of Attention in Perceptual Latency Priming.” <i>The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology A: Human Experimental Psychology</i> 57A, no. 8 (2004): 1411–36.","ama":"Scharlau I. The spatial distribution of attention in perceptual latency priming. <i>The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology A: Human Experimental Psychology</i>. 2004;57A(8):1411-1436."},"language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"keyword":["visual attention","spatial distribution","perceptual latency priming","Attention","Priming","Spatial Organization","Visual Perception"],"publication":"The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology A: Human Experimental Psychology","abstract":[{"text":"The spatial distribution of visual attention is a yet unresolved question. One of the main topics is whether attention is distributed in a graded fashion around an attended location (e.g., Downing, 1988; Zimba & Hughes, 1987). The present experiments explore whether, and on which conditions, gradients of attention arise and contribute to perceptual facilitation. A masked or unmasked prime precedes one of two targets whose temporal order has to be judged. The prime captures attention, which shortens the perceptual latency of the primed target (perceptual latency priming; Scharlau & Neumann, 2003a; Shore, Spence, & Klein, 2001). No strong evidence for an attentional gradient was found. (1) Accuracy of temporal order judgements was independent of the distance between the two targets that were judged. That is, facilitation of the second target by the first target was spatially invariant. (2) With targets of short duration, facilitation was independent of prime-target distance. (3) With ta","lang":"eng"}],"date_created":"2018-12-10T07:07:56Z","title":"The spatial distribution of attention in perceptual latency priming.","issue":"8","year":"2004"},{"title":"Direct parameter specification of an attention shift: Evidence from perceptual latency priming.","main_file_link":[{"url":"https://kw.uni-paderborn.de/fileadmin/fakultaet/Institute/psychologie/Kognitive_Psychologie/Publikationen/ScharlauAnsorge2003VisResDPS.pdf","open_access":"1"}],"oa":"1","date_updated":"2022-06-07T00:26:34Z","volume":43,"author":[{"last_name":"Scharlau","orcid":"0000-0003-2364-9489","full_name":"Scharlau, Ingrid","id":"451","first_name":"Ingrid"},{"last_name":"Ansorge","full_name":"Ansorge, Ulrich","first_name":"Ulrich"}],"date_created":"2018-12-10T07:01:37Z","year":"2003","intvolume":"        43","page":"1351 - 1363","citation":{"chicago":"Scharlau, Ingrid, and Ulrich Ansorge. “Direct Parameter Specification of an Attention Shift: Evidence from Perceptual Latency Priming.” <i>Vision Research</i> 43, no. 12 (2003): 1351–63.","ieee":"I. Scharlau and U. Ansorge, “Direct parameter specification of an attention shift: Evidence from perceptual latency priming.,” <i>Vision Research</i>, vol. 43, no. 12, pp. 1351–1363, 2003.","ama":"Scharlau I, Ansorge U. Direct parameter specification of an attention shift: Evidence from perceptual latency priming. <i>Vision Research</i>. 2003;43(12):1351-1363.","apa":"Scharlau, I., &#38; Ansorge, U. (2003). Direct parameter specification of an attention shift: Evidence from perceptual latency priming. <i>Vision Research</i>, <i>43</i>(12), 1351–1363.","short":"I. Scharlau, U. Ansorge, Vision Research 43 (2003) 1351–1363.","bibtex":"@article{Scharlau_Ansorge_2003, title={Direct parameter specification of an attention shift: Evidence from perceptual latency priming.}, volume={43}, number={12}, journal={Vision Research}, author={Scharlau, Ingrid and Ansorge, Ulrich}, year={2003}, pages={1351–1363} }","mla":"Scharlau, Ingrid, and Ulrich Ansorge. “Direct Parameter Specification of an Attention Shift: Evidence from Perceptual Latency Priming.” <i>Vision Research</i>, vol. 43, no. 12, 2003, pp. 1351–63."},"publication_identifier":{"issn":["0042-6989"]},"publication_status":"published","issue":"12","keyword":["direct parameter specification","DPS","attention shift","latency priming","sensorimotor control","stimuli","task-relevant features","visual targets","color","shape","latency effects","Adult","Attention","Discrimination (Psychology)","Female","Humans","Judgment","Male","Perceptual Masking","Reaction Time","Visual Perception","Attention","Perceptual Motor Processes","Response Latency","Stimulus Onset","Visual Stimulation","Form and Shape Perception","Sensory Adaptation"],"extern":"1","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"_id":"6065","department":[{"_id":"424"}],"user_id":"42165","abstract":[{"text":"In the direct parameter specification (DPS) mode of sensorimotor control, response parameters can be specified by stimuli that are not consciously perceived [Psychological Research/Psychologische Forschung 52 (1990) 207]. DPS is contingent on the current intentions. The invisible stimuli can be processed for the purposes of sensorimotor control only if they match the actual intentions, for example, share task-relevant features. The present experiments explore whether attentional capture by masked abrupt-onset stimuli is mediated via DPS. Participants judged which of two visual targets appeared first. Masked primes preceded one of the targets. The primes were either similar to the targets or not, in shape, or in color. Target-like (task-relevant), but not distractor-like (task-irrelevant), primes facilitated perceptual latencies of targets trailing at their positions. Thus, the latency effects resulted from DPS of an attention shift, rather than from bottom-up capture or from top-down ","lang":"eng"}],"status":"public","publication":"Vision Research","type":"journal_article"},{"abstract":[{"text":"Four experiments investigated the influence of a metacontrast-masked prime on temporal order judgments. The main results were (1) that a masked prime reduced the latency of the mask's conscious perception (perceptual latency priming), (2) that this effect was independent of whether the prime suffered strong or weak masking, (3) that it was unaffected by the degree of visual similarity between the prime and the mask, and that (4) there was no difference between congruent and incongruent primes. Finding (1) suggests that location cueing affects not only response times but also the latency of conscious perception. (2) The finding that priming was unaffected by the prime's detectability argues against a response bias interpretation of this effect. (3) Since visual similarity had no effect on the prime's efficiency, it is unlikely that sensory priming was involved. (4) The lack of a divergence between the effects of congruent and incongruent primes implies a functional difference between t","lang":"eng"}],"publication":"Psychological Research","keyword":["perceptual latency priming","temporal order judgments","masked stimuli","unmasked stimuli","attentional interpretation","response times","location cueing","visual perception","Adult","Attention","Female","Humans","Male","Models","Psychological","Perceptual Masking","Psychometrics","Reaction Time","Task Performance and Analysis","Time Perception","Masking","Reaction Time","Response Latency","Stimulus Parameters","Visual Contrast","Attention","Cues","Priming","Temporal Frequency","Temporal Order (Judgment)"],"language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"year":"2003","issue":"3","title":"Perceptual latency priming by masked and unmasked stimuli: Evidence for an attentional interpretation.","date_created":"2018-12-10T07:05:43Z","status":"public","type":"journal_article","extern":"1","_id":"6078","department":[{"_id":"424"}],"user_id":"42165","intvolume":"        67","page":"184 - 196","citation":{"mla":"Scharlau, Ingrid, and Odmar Neumann. “Perceptual Latency Priming by Masked and Unmasked Stimuli: Evidence for an Attentional Interpretation.” <i>Psychological Research</i>, vol. 67, no. 3, 2003, pp. 184–96.","bibtex":"@article{Scharlau_Neumann_2003, title={Perceptual latency priming by masked and unmasked stimuli: Evidence for an attentional interpretation.}, volume={67}, number={3}, journal={Psychological Research}, author={Scharlau, Ingrid and Neumann, Odmar}, year={2003}, pages={184–196} }","short":"I. Scharlau, O. Neumann, Psychological Research 67 (2003) 184–196.","apa":"Scharlau, I., &#38; Neumann, O. (2003). Perceptual latency priming by masked and unmasked stimuli: Evidence for an attentional interpretation. <i>Psychological Research</i>, <i>67</i>(3), 184–196.","ama":"Scharlau I, Neumann O. Perceptual latency priming by masked and unmasked stimuli: Evidence for an attentional interpretation. <i>Psychological Research</i>. 2003;67(3):184-196.","chicago":"Scharlau, Ingrid, and Odmar Neumann. “Perceptual Latency Priming by Masked and Unmasked Stimuli: Evidence for an Attentional Interpretation.” <i>Psychological Research</i> 67, no. 3 (2003): 184–96.","ieee":"I. Scharlau and O. Neumann, “Perceptual latency priming by masked and unmasked stimuli: Evidence for an attentional interpretation.,” <i>Psychological Research</i>, vol. 67, no. 3, pp. 184–196, 2003."},"publication_identifier":{"issn":["0340-0727"]},"publication_status":"published","main_file_link":[{"url":"https://kw.uni-paderborn.de/fileadmin/fakultaet/Institute/psychologie/Kognitive_Psychologie/Publikationen/ScharlauNeumann2003PsychResPLP.pdf","open_access":"1"}],"oa":"1","date_updated":"2022-06-07T00:27:08Z","volume":67,"author":[{"first_name":"Ingrid","orcid":"0000-0003-2364-9489","last_name":"Scharlau","id":"451","full_name":"Scharlau, Ingrid"},{"first_name":"Odmar","last_name":"Neumann","full_name":"Neumann, Odmar"}]},{"status":"public","abstract":[{"text":"Visual stimuli (primes) reduce the perceptual latency of a target appearing at the same location (perceptual latency priming, PLP). Three experiments assessed the time course of PLP by masked and, in Experiment 3, unmasked primes. Experiments 1 (N=11; mean age 26.9) and 2 (N=12; mean age 25.6) investigated the temporal parameters that determine the size of priming. Stimulus onset asynchrony was found to exert the main influence accompanied by a small effect of prime duration. Experiment 3 (N=19; mean age 27.7) used a large range of priming onset asynchronies. We suggest to explain PLP by the Asynchronous Updating Model which relates it to the asynchrony of 2 central coding processes, preattentive coding of basic visual features and attentional orienting as a prerequisite for perceptual judgments and conscious perception. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved)","lang":"eng"}],"publication":"Acta Psychologica","type":"journal_article","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"extern":"1","keyword":["perceptual latency priming","temporal parameters","Asynchronous Updating Model","time course","stimulus onset asynchrony","visual masking","attention","Adult","Attention","Female","Humans","Male","Perceptual Masking","Reaction Time","Time Perception","Visual Perception","Attention","Priming","Stimulus Onset","Visual Masking","Visual Perception","Models","Time"],"department":[{"_id":"424"}],"user_id":"42165","_id":"6086","page":"185 - 203","intvolume":"       113","citation":{"apa":"Scharlau, I., &#38; Neumann, O. (2003). Temporal parameters and time course of perceptual latency priming. <i>Acta Psychologica</i>, <i>113</i>(2), 185–203.","bibtex":"@article{Scharlau_Neumann_2003, title={Temporal parameters and time course of perceptual latency priming.}, volume={113}, number={2}, journal={Acta Psychologica}, author={Scharlau, Ingrid and Neumann, Odmar}, year={2003}, pages={185–203} }","short":"I. Scharlau, O. Neumann, Acta Psychologica 113 (2003) 185–203.","mla":"Scharlau, Ingrid, and Odmar Neumann. “Temporal Parameters and Time Course of Perceptual Latency Priming.” <i>Acta Psychologica</i>, vol. 113, no. 2, 2003, pp. 185–203.","ieee":"I. Scharlau and O. Neumann, “Temporal parameters and time course of perceptual latency priming.,” <i>Acta Psychologica</i>, vol. 113, no. 2, pp. 185–203, 2003.","chicago":"Scharlau, Ingrid, and Odmar Neumann. “Temporal Parameters and Time Course of Perceptual Latency Priming.” <i>Acta Psychologica</i> 113, no. 2 (2003): 185–203.","ama":"Scharlau I, Neumann O. Temporal parameters and time course of perceptual latency priming. <i>Acta Psychologica</i>. 2003;113(2):185-203."},"year":"2003","issue":"2","publication_identifier":{"issn":["0001-6918"]},"publication_status":"published","main_file_link":[{"open_access":"1","url":"https://kw.uni-paderborn.de/fileadmin/fakultaet/Institute/psychologie/Kognitive_Psychologie/Publikationen/ScharlauNeumann2003ActaPsychTimeCourse.pdf"}],"title":"Temporal parameters and time course of perceptual latency priming.","volume":113,"author":[{"first_name":"Ingrid","last_name":"Scharlau","orcid":"0000-0003-2364-9489","id":"451","full_name":"Scharlau, Ingrid"},{"last_name":"Neumann","full_name":"Neumann, Odmar","first_name":"Odmar"}],"date_created":"2018-12-10T07:07:20Z","date_updated":"2022-06-07T00:27:35Z","oa":"1"},{"keyword":["attention","leading primes","trailing primes","temporal order perception","perceptual latency priming","Adult","Attention","Female","Fixation","Ocular","Humans","Male","Perceptual Masking","Random Allocation","Time Perception","Visual Perception","Attention","Masking","Priming","Stimulus Frequency","Temporal Frequency","Temporal Order (Judgment)"],"language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"publication":"Perception & Psychophysics","abstract":[{"text":"Presenting a masked prime leading a target influences the perceived onset of the masking target. This priming effect is explained by the asynchronous updating model: The prime initiates attentional allocation toward its location, which renders a trailing target at the same place consciously available earlier. In 3 experiments, this perceptual latency priming by leading primes was examined jointly with the effects of trailing primes in order to compare the explanation of the asynchronous updating model with the onset-averaging and the P-center hypotheses. Exp 1 (n=15, mean age 27.1 yrs) showed that an attended, as well as an unattended, prime leads to perceptual latency priming. In addition, a large effect of trailing primes on the onset of a target was found. As Exp 2 (n=13, mean age 26.5 yrs) demonstrated, this effect is quite robust, although smaller than that of a leading prime. In Exp 3 (n=13, mean age 24.8 yrs), masked primes were used. Under these conditions, no influence of tra","lang":"eng"}],"date_created":"2018-12-10T07:04:51Z","title":"Leading, but not trailing, primes influence temporal order perception: Further evidence for an attentional account of perceptual latency priming.","issue":"8","year":"2002","_id":"6074","user_id":"42165","department":[{"_id":"424"}],"extern":"1","type":"journal_article","status":"public","date_updated":"2022-06-07T00:28:04Z","oa":"1","author":[{"id":"451","full_name":"Scharlau, Ingrid","last_name":"Scharlau","orcid":"0000-0003-2364-9489","first_name":"Ingrid"}],"volume":64,"main_file_link":[{"open_access":"1","url":"https://kw.uni-paderborn.de/fileadmin/fakultaet/Institute/psychologie/Kognitive_Psychologie/Publikationen/Scharlau2002P_PLeadingTrailing.pdf"}],"publication_status":"published","publication_identifier":{"issn":["0031-5117"]},"citation":{"ieee":"I. Scharlau, “Leading, but not trailing, primes influence temporal order perception: Further evidence for an attentional account of perceptual latency priming.,” <i>Perception &#38; Psychophysics</i>, vol. 64, no. 8, pp. 1346–1360, 2002.","chicago":"Scharlau, Ingrid. “Leading, but Not Trailing, Primes Influence Temporal Order Perception: Further Evidence for an Attentional Account of Perceptual Latency Priming.” <i>Perception &#38; Psychophysics</i> 64, no. 8 (2002): 1346–60.","ama":"Scharlau I. Leading, but not trailing, primes influence temporal order perception: Further evidence for an attentional account of perceptual latency priming. <i>Perception &#38; Psychophysics</i>. 2002;64(8):1346-1360.","apa":"Scharlau, I. (2002). Leading, but not trailing, primes influence temporal order perception: Further evidence for an attentional account of perceptual latency priming. <i>Perception &#38; Psychophysics</i>, <i>64</i>(8), 1346–1360.","short":"I. Scharlau, Perception &#38; Psychophysics 64 (2002) 1346–1360.","bibtex":"@article{Scharlau_2002, title={Leading, but not trailing, primes influence temporal order perception: Further evidence for an attentional account of perceptual latency priming.}, volume={64}, number={8}, journal={Perception &#38; Psychophysics}, author={Scharlau, Ingrid}, year={2002}, pages={1346–1360} }","mla":"Scharlau, Ingrid. “Leading, but Not Trailing, Primes Influence Temporal Order Perception: Further Evidence for an Attentional Account of Perceptual Latency Priming.” <i>Perception &#38; Psychophysics</i>, vol. 64, no. 8, 2002, pp. 1346–60."},"intvolume":"        64","page":"1346 - 1360"}]
