Audiovisual Prior Entry: Evidence from the Synchrony Comparison Judgment Task

Audiovisual Prior Entry: Evidence from the Synchrony Comparison Judgment Task

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dc.contributor.author Capstick, Gary
dc.date.accessioned 2012-07-26T07:36:03Z
dc.date.available 2012-07-26T07:36:03Z
dc.date.created 2012 en_US
dc.date.issued 2012-07-26
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10393/23100
dc.description.abstract Prior entry refers to the notion that attended stimuli are perceived sooner than unattended stimuli due to a speed up in sensory processing. The century long debate regarding the prior entry phenomenon’s existence has always been grounded in the degree to which the methods applied to the problem allow for cognitive response bias. This thesis continues that trend by applying the synchrony comparison judgment method to the problem of audiovisual prior entry. Experiment 1 put this method into context with two other common psychophysical methods – the temporal order judgment and the synchrony judgment – that have been applied to the prior entry problem. The results of this experiment indicated that the temporal order judgment method was out of step with the other two methods in terms of the parameter estimates typically used to evaluate prior entry. Experiment 2 evaluated and confirmed that a specific response bias helps explain the difference in parameter estimates between the temporal order judgment method and the other two. Experiment 3 evaluated the precision of the synchrony comparison judgment method. The results indicated that the method was precise enough to detect potentially small prior entry effect sizes, and that it afforded the ability to detect those participants with points of subjective synchrony that deviate substantially from zero. Finally, Experiment 4 applied the synchrony comparison judgment method to a prior entry scenario. A prior entry effect was not realized. Overall, this thesis highlights the drawbacks of all previous methods used to evaluate audiovisual perception, including prior entry, and validates the use of the synchrony comparison judgment. Further, due to the resistance of this method to response bias, this result now stands as the most convincing evidence yet against the prior entry phenomenon. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.subject prior entry en_US
dc.subject attention en_US
dc.subject temporal order judgment en_US
dc.subject synchrony comparison judgment en_US
dc.subject synchrony judgment en_US
dc.subject response bias en_US
dc.title Audiovisual Prior Entry: Evidence from the Synchrony Comparison Judgment Task en_US
dc.type Thèse / Thesis en_US
dc.faculty.department Psychologie / Psychology en_US
dc.contributor.supervisor Fouriezos, George
dc.embargo.terms immediate en_US
dc.degree.name PhD en_US
dc.degree.level doctorate en_US
dc.degree.discipline Sciences sociales / Social Sciences en_US

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