{"publication_identifier":{"issn":["1895-1171"]},"citation":{"short":"I. Scharlau, Advances in Cognitive Psychology 3 (2007) 241–255.","ama":"Scharlau I. Temporal processes in prime-mask interaction: Assessing perceptual consequences of masked information. Advances in Cognitive Psychology. 2007;3(1-2):241-255.","apa":"Scharlau, I. (2007). Temporal processes in prime-mask interaction: Assessing perceptual consequences of masked information. Advances in Cognitive Psychology, 3(1–2), 241–255.","bibtex":"@article{Scharlau_2007, title={Temporal processes in prime-mask interaction: Assessing perceptual consequences of masked information.}, volume={3}, number={1–2}, journal={Advances in Cognitive Psychology}, author={Scharlau, Ingrid}, year={2007}, pages={241–255} }","ieee":"I. Scharlau, “Temporal processes in prime-mask interaction: Assessing perceptual consequences of masked information.,” Advances in Cognitive Psychology, vol. 3, no. 1–2, pp. 241–255, 2007.","chicago":"Scharlau, Ingrid. “Temporal Processes in Prime-Mask Interaction: Assessing Perceptual Consequences of Masked Information.” Advances in Cognitive Psychology 3, no. 1–2 (2007): 241–55.","mla":"Scharlau, Ingrid. “Temporal Processes in Prime-Mask Interaction: Assessing Perceptual Consequences of Masked Information.” Advances in Cognitive Psychology, vol. 3, no. 1–2, 2007, pp. 241–55."},"extern":"1","intvolume":" 3","date_updated":"2022-06-07T00:13:52Z","publication_status":"published","main_file_link":[{"url":"https://ac-psych.org/index.php/en/issues/volume/3/issue/1#art43","open_access":"1"}],"status":"public","oa":"1","department":[{"_id":"424"}],"publication":"Advances in Cognitive Psychology","year":"2007","page":"241 - 255","issue":"1-2","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"volume":3,"keyword":["temporal processes","prime mask interaction","perceptual consequences","masked information","visual backward masking","visual perception","Temporal Lobe","Visual Masking","Visual Perception","Consequence"],"_id":"6087","abstract":[{"lang":"eng","text":"Visual backward masking is frequently used to study the temporal dynamics of visual perception. These dynamics may include the temporal features of conscious percepts, as suggested, for instance, by the asynchronous-updating model (Neumann, 1982) and perceptual-retouch theory (Bachmann, 1994). These models predict that the perceptual latency of a visual backward mask is shorter than that of a like reference stimulus that was not preceded by a masked stimulus. The prediction has been confirmed by studies using temporal-order judgments: For certain asynchronies between mask and reference stimulus, temporal-order reversals are quite frequent (e.g. Scharlau, & Neumann, 2003a). However, it may be argued that these reversals were due to a response bias in favour of the mask rather than true temporal-perceptual effects. I introduce two measures for assessing latency effects that (1) are not prone to such a response bias, (2) allow to quantify the latency gain, and (3) extend the perceptual e"}],"user_id":"42165","type":"journal_article","author":[{"id":"451","first_name":"Ingrid","last_name":"Scharlau","orcid":"0000-0003-2364-9489","full_name":"Scharlau, Ingrid"}],"title":"Temporal processes in prime-mask interaction: Assessing perceptual consequences of masked information.","date_created":"2018-12-10T07:07:33Z"}