ABSTRACT

In the late-1980s, visual cognition was a small subfield of cognitive psychology, and the standard texts mainly discussed just iconic memory in their sections on visual cognition. In the subsequent two decades, and especially very recently, many remarkable new aspects of the processing of brief visual stimuli have been discovered -- change blindness, repetition blindness, the attentional blink, newly-discovered properties of visual short-term memory and of the face recognition system, the influence of reentrant processing on visual perception, and the surprisingly intimate relationships between eyeblinks and visual cognition.

This volume provides up-to-date tutorial reviews of these many new developments in the study of visual cognition written by the leaders in the discipline, providing an incisive and comprehensive survey of research in this dynamic field.

chapter 1|8 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|24 pages

Dissecting Spatial Visual Attention

chapter 5|28 pages

Getting Into Guided Search

chapter 6|22 pages

Eyeblinks and Cognition

chapter 11|32 pages

Is Face Processing Automatic?

chapter 13|18 pages

Visual Memories