{"author":[{"full_name":"Scharlau, Ingrid","id":"451","last_name":"Scharlau","orcid":"0000-0003-2364-9489","first_name":"Ingrid"},{"first_name":"Gernot","full_name":"Horstmann, Gernot","last_name":"Horstmann"}],"extern":"1","year":"2006","intvolume":" 2","status":"public","citation":{"apa":"Scharlau, I., & Horstmann, G. (2006). Perceptual latency priming and illusory line motion: Facilitation by gradients of attention? Advances in Cognitive Psychology, 2(1), 87–97.","ieee":"I. Scharlau and G. Horstmann, “Perceptual latency priming and illusory line motion: Facilitation by gradients of attention?,” Advances in Cognitive Psychology, vol. 2, no. 1, pp. 87–97, 2006.","mla":"Scharlau, Ingrid, and Gernot Horstmann. “Perceptual Latency Priming and Illusory Line Motion: Facilitation by Gradients of Attention?” Advances in Cognitive Psychology, vol. 2, no. 1, 2006, pp. 87–97.","ama":"Scharlau I, Horstmann G. Perceptual latency priming and illusory line motion: Facilitation by gradients of attention? Advances in Cognitive Psychology. 2006;2(1):87-97.","short":"I. Scharlau, G. Horstmann, Advances in Cognitive Psychology 2 (2006) 87–97.","chicago":"Scharlau, Ingrid, and Gernot Horstmann. “Perceptual Latency Priming and Illusory Line Motion: Facilitation by Gradients of Attention?” Advances in Cognitive Psychology 2, no. 1 (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} }"},"user_id":"42165","volume":2,"department":[{"_id":"424"}],"publication_identifier":{"issn":["1895-1171"]},"title":"Perceptual latency priming and illusory line motion: Facilitation by gradients of attention?","_id":"6077","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"publication":"Advances in Cognitive Psychology","date_updated":"2022-06-07T04:36:36Z","type":"journal_article","abstract":[{"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)","lang":"eng"}],"date_created":"2018-12-10T07:05:32Z","keyword":["perceptual latency priming","illusory line motion","attention","visual angle","Illusions (Perception)","Priming","Visual Field","Visual Perception","Visual Attention","Spatial Orientation (Perception)"],"issue":"1","publication_status":"published","page":"87 - 97"}